Orlando Weekly March 7, 2018

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MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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FREE | MARCH 7-13, 2018

Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Staff Writers Monivette Cordeiro, Xander Peters Calendar Editor Thaddeus McCollum Music Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Colin Wolf Contributors Peg Aloi, Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Jason Ferguson, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Joey Roulette, Moriah Russo, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Madeleine Scott, Nicolette Shurba Editorial Interns Linzie Lawton, Shayla Phillips, Gunnar Shuler Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Major Accounts Specialist Leslie Egan Senior Multimedia Account Executive Dan Winkler Multimedia Account Executives Scott Navarro, Scotty Spar Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Advertising Coordinator Danielle Lebron Marketing and Events Events & Marketing Director Eric Landrum Marketing and Events Manager Rachel Hoyle Events and Promotions Coordinator Kevin Ruane Marketing Interns Kelsey Stidham, Hayley Ullman

12 Cover design by Melissa McHenry. Ad, above, provided by Spike’s Tactical.

Creative Services Art Director Melissa McHenry Production Manager Daniel Rodriguez Graphic Designer Justin “SKIP” Skipper Business Operations Manager Hollie Mahadeo Business Assistant Allysha Willison Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner VP of Digital Services Stacy Volhein Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon Human Resources Director Lisa Beilstein euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, voicemediagroup.com Orlando Weekly Inc. 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, Florida 32801 orlandoweekly.com Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420

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NEWS + FEATURES

FOOD + DRINK

7 Your Words

23 Cups and cakes

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MUSIC 35 Bittersweet symphony Choir Boy finds faith in heavenly dream pop

Plush patisserie the Glass Knife spares no expense in offering the finest

Readers react to stories in our last issue

7 This Modern World 9 ICYMI

35 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night

23 Tip Jar

Short briefs on news you may have missed in the

Pom Pom’s Pom rubs elbows with Guy Fieri, plus more in our weekly food roundup

past week

25 Remix

11 Informed Dissent So long as obsequious minions of the merchants of death hold power, nothing will change

37 This Little Underground The Abbey showing some new rock pulse with Big Business and Buildings; 1000mods and Telekinetic Yeti make one of the best heavy debuts in ages

Our take on the piña colada is a much better idea than trying to step out on your old lady on the sly

28 Recently Reviewed Short takes on restaurants we’ve reviewed recently

12 How to sell an AR-15 Liberal tears, libel suits and loudmouth ruffians: Inside the lucrative business of marketing fear

Orlando Weekly is published every week by Euclid Media Group Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2018 by Euclid Media Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Additional copies or back issues may be purchased at the Orlando Weekly offices for $1. Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $75; one-year subscriptions for $125. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL POSTMASTER: Send address changes to ORLANDO WEEKLY 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, FL 32801.

ARTS + CULTURE

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19 Live Active Cultures The work of self-taught set designer Samantha DiGeorge helps make Theater on the Edge one of the best companies in Orlando

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FILM

CALENDAR

31 Jonesing for more Marvel’s Jessica Jones finally returns to Netflix after a three-year wait

38 Selections 40 The Week 41 Down the Road

31 Film Listings

Back Pages

Cinema-oriented events to go see this week

49 Gimme Shelter 49 Savage Love 50 Classifieds

33 On Screens in Orlando Movies playing this week: Gringo, A Wrinkle in Time and more

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Readers react to blog posts and stories from the Feb. 28 issue. On March 2, we reported that the Florida House had approved a bill that would limit opioid prescription to threeday supplies, though seven-day supplies would be allowed if deemed necessary by physicians. The restrictions wouldn’t apply to patients under palliative care or suffering from pain related to cancer, terminal illness or serious traumatic injuries. @Maggie Horton Chronic pain sufferers are not looking to get high. We are just looking to get functional. @Dave Christian In order to get a prescription filled, you have to walk into a doctor’s office. So now, instead of a patient dealing with chronic pain going to see the doctor once per month, that person is now going to have to go to the doctor’s office every three days or every 10 days? This bill hurts those people.

@Carlos Lugo Imagine the manpower needed in a physician’s office to refill requests for prescriptions every three days. Another example of politicians enacting legislation just so they can say, “See? I did something!” On Feb. 28, we reported that police at the University of Central Florida were looking for a suspect wearing a LeBron James jersey who reportedly stood up in the middle of class and threw powder in the air. The incident was enough to freak out law enforcement, and the classroom was evacuated following the incident. (Spoiler alert: The prank was a reenactment of a classic move by James.) @Christopher J. Ellis Can’t even pull a college prank anymore without being hunted by the cops; what happened to us? @Tito Pinero This dude’s gonna get himself on a list for imitating a basketball player. Legend. @Geizi Rojas Not a joke. Prosecute them. Hard.

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BY MONIVETTE CORDEIRO

Florida lawmakers really want to arm teachers, Parkland parents and survivors visit Pulse, a shooting at Wahlburgers and other things you may have missed last week. »

Police-involved shooting at downtown Wahlburgers leaves one man dead: Orlando Police officers fatally shot an armed man who came

into the downtown Orlando Wahlburgers restaurant last week. Authorities say Qawi A. Muhammad, 48, had a domestic violence injunction filed against him by someone who worked at the restaurant. Muhammad walked into the Wahlburgers on Orange Avenue shortly after it opened at 11 a.m. Customers and employees called 911 and followed Muhammad out. Police surrounded him at Hughey Avenue and told him to drop his weapon. Law enforcement officials said he refused, so officers fired at him. Muhammad later died at Orlando Regional Medical Center.

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Parkland high school shooting survivors and parents place 49 roses at Pulse: With roses in hand, about 40 Parkland parents

and student survivors stopped in Orlando on their way home to South Florida Wednesday to pay tribute to the 49 victims of the 2016 attack at the gay nightclub Pulse. The parents and survivors had been in Tallahassee to fight for stricter gun laws at the Florida Capitol two weeks after a shooter slaughtered 17 students and teachers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. They were greeted with hugs by Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Pulse survivors. “It shouldn’t have taken [Parkland] for us to react,” said Parkland parent Jaime O’Dwyer. “After Pulse, there was no [legislative] reaction at the Capitol. That’s the saddest part. That’s something to be ashamed of.”

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Putin used a graphic of Florida getting nuked to show off new Russian weapons: If you’ve ever wondered what imminent

death would look like, no worries – Vladimir Putin has you covered. The Russian president showed off new weaponry to the country’s Federal Assembly using an animated video of a nuclear strike on Florida, headed straight at what looks like the site of President Donald Trump’s private resort, Mar-a-Lago. “As you can see from this video, it can attack any target through the North Pole or via the South Pole,” Putin said. “No missile defense system will be able to withstand it.” Cool, cool, cool.

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Florida lawmakers back armed teachers, reject assault weapons ban: Surprise! Florida lawmakers have responded to a school mass

shooting by – you guessed it – kowtowing to the gun lobby, whose main goal is to sell as many guns as possible. The Florida Senate has backed a plan to allow specially trained teachers to bring guns to schools (which the NRA loves) and narrowly rejected a ban on the possession of semi-automatic assault weapons and large-capacity magazines (which Parkland shooting survivors have been demanding). The school marshal program aimed at arming teachers is so bad it’s even got Gov. Rick Scott and teachers unions on the same side against the measure. Way to go, Florida Legislature!

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Lyft is offering free rides to anyone going to March for Our Lives rallies: Lyft is offering free rides to people across the U.S. who

want to attend “March for Our Lives” protests against gun violence on March 24. The ride-hailing company announced last week it was “honored to support the work” of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students who organized the rally days after a gunman killed 17 of their classmates and teachers in Parkland. “We believe there is something seriously wrong when the threat of gun violence is so frequent and real throughout our country. And like many, we are inspired by your leadership,” said Lyft co-founders in a letter to students. In Orlando, the March for Our Lives rally will take place at noon March 24 at Lake Eola Park. mcordeiro@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS AND GO SCREW YOURSELF So long as obsequious minions of the merchants of death hold power, nothing will change You couldn’t have scripted a

scene that displayed a pathological lack of self-awareness any better than this: On Saturday, the state Senate voted down Linda Stewart’s bill to temporarily ban sales of AR-15s. Then, at Gov. Rick Scott’s urging, senators promptly held a moment of silence for the 17 victims of the Parkland massacre. No action. Thoughts and prayers. Wait for the next shooting spree. Rinse. Repeat. During the assault-weapon debate, Sen. Kelli Stargel, R-Lakeland, cranked the stupidity knob up to 11: “Thoughts and prayers are really the only thing that’s going to stop the evil from within the individual that is taking up their arms to do this type of massacre.” Read that again slowly, and let the cynicism and shruggie-emoticon complacency of Stargel’s insipid remark wash over you. At the risk of being glib, God didn’t seem to be paying much attention to your thoughts and prayers after Sandy Hook, or after Pulse, or after Las Vegas, all tragedies that gut-punched us but led to little more than platitudes from the Republicans in power. All the while, the body count keeps rising. Now there are another 17 dead bodies – and a legislative body that thinks more thoughts and prayers will do the trick. That’s not to say the indignation arising from Parkland has been completely ineffectual. The Senate is still considering the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act, which would raise the age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21, require a three-day waiting period, ban bump stocks, give cops more authority to seize weapons from those deemed mentally unfit, and provide funding for more armed school resource officers and mental health counselors. (After the moment of silence Saturday, the Senate rejected a motion to allow parents to opt students out of classrooms with armed teachers.) Such a bill

wouldn’t stand a chance in a state legislature renowned for its slavishness to the gun lobby, were the students not dragging lawmakers along kicking and screaming. But it says something that the Senate couldn’t even bring itself to place a two-year moratorium on the mass shooter’s favorite weapon, the AR-15, even though a recent Quinnipiac poll showed that more than 60 percent of Florida residents support a ban on assault rifles and high-capacity magazines. It says something that, with MS Douglas students forcing a debate that the National Rifle Association would just as soon not have, the best Florida can muster is a waiting period and a requirement that the purchaser of a war machine be old enough to legally buy beer. And it says something that, in the U.S. Senate, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has decided to put gun reforms on the backburner, as it’s more important to deregulate the financial industry and give Wall Street executives a big, fat kiss on the lips. Much has been written in the last few weeks about the NRA’s vice-like grip on policy, both in Florida and across the country. Stories have highlighted the thousands and millions of dollars Republicans – from state legislators to U.S. senators to the president of the United States – have raked in from the gun lobby and lamented the familiar ritual of outrage and inaction that seems to follow these incidents. Those two aspects, of course, go together. Consider this anecdote from a New Yorker profile of Marion Hammer, the NRA’s allpowerful Florida lobbyist. In it, state Rep. Jared Moskowitz is talking to Coral Springs city commissioner Dan Daley two days after the Parkland killings: “‘I was talking to one of the Douglas students,’ Daley says. ‘His only words to me were “Do something.” I had to tell him that I legally can’t do anything, because the governor could take away my job if I tried.’”

Moskowitz turns to reporter Mike Spies and says, “That’s the legacy of Marion Hammer.” Hammer, Spies explains, “is nearing four decades as the most influential gun lobbyist in the United States. Her policies have elevated Florida’s gun owners to a uniquely privileged status, and made the public carrying of firearms a fact of daily life in the state.” She was the force behind Stand Your Ground, as well as a 2011 bill that punishes local officials who try to enact any sort of gun regulations. “Hammer is not an elected official,” Spies continues, “but she can create policy, see it through to passage, and use government resources to achieve her aims. These days, Florida’s Republican-controlled legislature almost never allows any bill that appears to hinder gun owners to come up for a vote.” As the story notes, 91 percent of Florida Republican lawmakers have an A-minus rating or higher from the NRA. But it’s probably too simplistic to argue that it’s the NRA’s money that keeps legislators in line. The bigger issue is that Republicans don’t want to go into a GOP primary with Hammer as an enemy. As former state representative and now U.S. congressman Matt Gaetz told Spies, “If you’re with Marion 95 percent of the time, you’re a damn traitor.” And so, when tragedy strikes, you get thoughts and prayers, because the spineless people in power have been utterly cowed into submission by a gun lobbyist. The children of Douglas High need more damn traitors, not another pointless moment of silence. If God is out there listening to Republican supplications, he’s made it quite clear that it’s up to us mere mortals to try to stave off the next massacre. But that’s not really what those thoughts and prayers are about; they’re a way to pretend that you care without doing anything that would piss Marion Hammer off. That, folks, is how the Florida legislature operates. And that’s why – so long as these obsequious minions of merchants of death hold power – nothing will change. Come November, tell them where they can shove their thoughts and prayers. @jeffreybillman on Twitter feedback@orlandoweeky.com orlandoweekly.com

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HOW TO SELL AN AR-15 12

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liberal tears, libel suits and loudmouth ruffians: inside the lucrative business of marketing fear BY XA N D ER PETERS

T

hree loud bangs echo across the warehouse walls, each about a second apart. It’s an unforgiving noise, reminiscent of a battering ram meeting a steel curtain head-on. Wham – one Mississippi. Wham – two Mississippi. Wham – three Mississippi. The ringing of firepower on metal stops and then starts again, a three-peat of loud clangs in a milieu of near stillness. The jangling of tools in a workshop chimes in between shots. It’s a sunny Monday morning in early February at the headquarters of Spike’s Tactical, an Apopka-based gun manufacturer. Kit Cope, the company’s marketing director, points to a red metal box that’s neatly tucked into one of the warehouse’s back corners. The box stands about a foot higher than the average American man is tall, and on its front face there’s a small circular gap, into which one of Cope’s colleagues is currently test-firing a freshly assembled AR-15. It’s the same classification of weapon used in the recent massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. The device is called a lead trap, Cope says. It’s designed to absorb the momentum of a bullet. Every firearm that’s assembled at Spike’s Tactical – from handguns to the company’s signature weapons, an array of semiautomatic AR-15-style rifles – is tested on site before they’re put into the hands of consumers. Some of the company’s AR-15

models, such as the “Crusader,” even come with a Bible verse engraved on the firearm’s lower receiver. (For instance, “Praise be to the Lord, my rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.”) If not for the gunshots coming from the warehouse’s back corner, the setting could be described as calm. But as of late at Spike’s Tactical – in part due to the warming of our nation’s political climate – day-to-day operations have been anything

“WE’RE SELLING GUNS. BUT WE’RE ALSO SELLING A CULTURE.” but calm. Front office phones ringing with recurring death threats or threats to “firebomb that place” are generally considered outside the realm of calmness. “The girls up front,” Cope says, “they took the brunt of it. Even Friday, somebody called up and said, ‘Hey, is this Spike’s Tactical?’ And he said, ‘Fuck you, you’re all a bunch of Nazis; go rot in hell.’ Click. We get that.”

On Jan. 7, the folks behind Spike’s Tactical made headlines after they posted a controversial advertisement across the company’s social media accounts as part of its annual design and marketing collaboration with Pipe Hitters Union, a Texas-based apparel company. Pictured in the ad, which ran in Skillset magazine, a publication with the mission of “redefining the alpha lifestyle”: four heavily tattooed men wearing bulletproof vests, backs turned to the camera and seemingly relaxed but ready for combat. Each man is holding his own semiautomatic rifle as he stares down a group of masked protesters clad in all black, some of whom are holding makeshift weapons like lead pipes and heavy-duty flashlights; none of whom, like their counterparts, are holding guns. Behind the protesters, you spot a crumbling, burning city for which the demonstrators are ostensibly to blame. When your eyes drift across the ad, it tells a short, albeit sensationalized, story. A series of cities are listed in the top left corner – “Berkeley-Portland-CharlottesvilleBoston” – all of which have experienced protests gone awry in recent months. Captioned below: a series of hashtags like “#liberaltears,” “#thisisntaboutrace” and – the Internet’s apparent favorite – “#hillaryforprison.” But in the top right corner, the text is more provocative, and very much meant to provoke; it reads: “NOT TODAY ANTIFA.”

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“Antifa,” shorthand for “anti-fascist” protesters, is a term used to designate far-left activists who use what’s called black-bloc tactics. While protesting issues like racism and economic inequality, they cover their faces and often dress in all black to make themselves less easy to single out. Although there’s no physical headquarters nor an actual hierarchy within the group, antifa, like most modern activism, proliferates via the web. The micro-movement’s roots in the U.S. date back to the punk-rock era of the 1980s, then called “anti-racist action.” Only recently have these protesters found their way back into the national periphery, at the same time that militia-like far right-wingers, including the groups affiliated with the notorious alt-right, have trekked their own paths into the American consciousness. Last year, antifa demonstrators grabbed the nation’s attention with their protests of President Donald Trump’s inauguration and the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August. White supremacists and neo-Nazis descended on the college town to protest the removal of a Confederate statue; by the end of a day full of gun-waving and violent clashes, an alt-right demonstrator had used his car to mow down a group of protesters, injuring 19 and killing one woman. Even prior to Charlottesville, though, the Department of Homeland Security had formally classified antifa’s activities as acts of “domestic terrorist violence.” On paper, that means authorities view antifa protesters through a similar lens as, say, white supremacists, anti-abortion extremists and radical animal rights activists. As a result, antifa quickly became a conservative boogeyman, and Spike’s Tactical – the firearm manufacturer with the slogan “The Finest AR-15s on the Planet” – decided to use that boogeyman to sell guns. Following the release of the two company’s joint ad, publications like Vice News and Newsweek (and, yes, Orlando Weekly) criticized the companies’ scapegoating of activists. While OW stopped short of directly referring to the ad as anything besides “completely insane,” in Cope’s words, reporters at Vice News and Newsweek went a little further in that the publications “straight-up called us Nazis.” (They didn’t.) Because of that, during the sit-down interview that day in their warehouse, Cope told OW that Spike’s Tactical was looking at pursuing a libel suit against at least one of the publications. Cope says the company had already decided on the ad’s general concept before deciding on a bad guy. “We could have

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put ‘Not Today, Nazi Motherfuckers,’ or anything,” Cope says. In fact, Cope adds, he and two others in charge of the ad – Cole Leleux, general manager at Spike’s Tactical, and Lincoln Osiris, president of Pipe Hitters Union – had initially wanted to show armed men facing off against neo-Nazis. They thought it would complement last year’s ad, which depicted radical jihadists alongside a young blonde woman in an orange jumpsuit, with text reading, “They’re already here … Are you prepared?” But putting Nazi symbols on any sort of advertisement, whether for firearms or anything else, has a way of complicating things with the customer base. So, instead, they settled on antifa, because, as Cope says, “now they’re actually training in violent arts.” “There are so many gun owners who aren’t going to stand for a bunch of loudmouth, illegal ruffians marching down their neighborhood, breaking car windows and stuff,” he says. “So what’s going to happen? There’s going to be a standoff – and it’s not going to be between Nazis and antifa. That’s happened.” Spike’s Tactical, in other words, is selling safety, not a piece of machinery? “We’re selling firearms,” Cope says. “We’re selling guns. But we’re also selling a culture.” It’s what he calls a “pro-American, pro-law enforcement, pro-veteran, proSecond Amendment way of life.” But what does it mean to be pro-American, as Cope puts it? Selling weapons goes hand-in-hand with exploiting insecurities; historically gun sales have spiked following mass shootings. As Cope suggests, does a more heavily armed society actually make for a more polite society? Tom Gabor, a Palm Beach County-based criminologist and the author of Confronting Gun Violence in America, says that’s not the case, even if some have been led to believe otherwise. “The United States, we have the highest civilian gun ownership in the world. We should be the safest advanced country [by that rationale], and we have the greatest gun violence problem,” Gabor says. “So if we believe the argument that guns are protective, more guns would mean less crimes, right?” Gabor continues: “What we see is that the states with the highest levels of gun ownership and the weakest gun laws” – such as Florida – “have the highest gun mortality.” But in America, that’s what it takes – fear, anxiety, emotion, all in the name of floating the gun industry’s bank balance, even if the facts say otherwise. That’s how you sell an AR-15.


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“America’s Team” is reserved by many for the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, in a blog post on the National Rifle Association’s website, the powerful organization proudly calls the AR-15 “America’s most popular rifle.” It’s not like that blanket statement isn’t backed by numbers: According to estimates provided by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, between 5 million and 10 million AR-15 rifles are currently owned in the U.S., just a small piece of the gun-owning pie. More than 310 million firearms are legally owned nationwide – nearly one for every American – and that’s not even accounting for the sprawling black market. But the AR-15 has always been a tool designed specifically for war. In its purest form, as its history demonstrates, it’s a legitimate killing machine. In The Gun, a biography of the assault rifle, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist C.J. Chivers writes that the AR-15’s roots trace back to the arms buildup of the Cold War. The Soviets developed the Kalashnikov rifle in the late 1940s, now known as the fully automatic AK-47. By the time the Vietnam War began, the AK-47 had found its way into the hands of the American military’s enemies in North Vietnam. So in the early 1960s, Defense Secretary Robert McNamara ordered the Pentagon to design a gun to match the AK-47’s lethality, and thus was born the Armalite AR-15 rifle. (After some modifications, the military dubbed it the M16.) A 1962 report from the Defense Documentation Center for Scientific and Technical Research (now the Defense Technical Information Center) describes the weapon’s destructive capability: “At a distance of approximately [50 feet], one [Army Ranger] fired an AR-15 fully automatic hitting one [Viet Cong] with three rounds with the first burst. One round in the head, took it completely off. Another in the right arm, took it completely off, too. One round hit him in the right side, causing a hole about five inches in diameter.” Today, as a half-century ago, the AR-15 still uses a .223-caliber bullet. However, instead of being a fully automatic weapon (basically, a machine gun), the rifle is now designed for civilian use as a semiautomatic (meaning one pull of the trigger releases one round). In its simplest definition, an assault rifle is defined by Merriam-Webster as “any of various intermediate-range, magazine-fed military rifles (such as the AK-47) that can be set for automatic or semiautomatic fire.” Perhaps connected to the rise in violent crime and the crack epidemic, civilian

ownership of the AR-15 increased through the 1980s. Hunting was declining in popularity, and the NRA saw a chance to harvest new demographics. Its marketing ploy was fear. As gun writer Massab Ayoob explains in a 1993 article in Shooting Industry magazine: “Customers come to you every day out of fear. Fear of what they read in the newspaper. Fear of what they watch on the 11 o’clock news. Fear of the terrible acts of violence they see on the street. Your job, in no uncertain terms, is to sell them confidence in the form of steel and lead.” According to research from the Violence Policy Center, which advocates for gun control, “The National Rifle Association helped stoke sales with a series of sensational fear-mongering ads aimed at taking gun owners’ rights down to gut level. The ads used garish photos, inflammatory copy and hyped headlines to push for the use of firearms for self-defense. Typical captions included: ‘Should you shoot a rapist before he cuts your throat?’ and ‘If you’re attacked on your porch, do you want your neighbors to be opposed to gun ownership or members of the NRA?’” In 1994, due in part to the increasing use of assault weapons in inner-city street violence and a 1989 elementary school shooting in Stockton, California, that left five students dead and more than 30 others injured, Congress narrowly passed a federal assault weapons ban on a 52-48 vote in the Senate. As a subsection of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, the ban was set to last for 10 years, but only applied to weapons manufactured after the date of the ban’s enactment. The law effectively made it illegal for firearm manufacturers to produce 18 specific models of assault weapons, including AR-15s and AR-70s, as well as any firearms that contained certain military-style amenities – like a flash suppressor, a bayonet mount or a grenade launcher. But in 2004, the Republican-controlled Congress let the ban expire in accordance with its sunset provision. That year, about 107,000 AR-style rifles were manufactured. In 2015, that number ballooned to about 1.2 million.

When questioned, Cope is quick

to admit that the company has seen a dip in sales since Trump took office. He’s not alone: With the new administration firmly in its pocket, the gun industry could no longer gin up dire warnings that Barack Obama was coming for your guns. “We’ve taken a hit, just like every other gun manufacturer since the election,” he says. “It’s a double-edged sword,

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you know? Like, we want this particular political ideology to have control, but as a company that means we’re going to do way less business.” Annual gun production increased by 239 percent during the Obama administration, and the NRA saw its membership hit a record 5 million. But since Trump’s election, gun sales have plummeted by as much as 9 percent. According to a news release on the website of firearm manufacturer Vista, which owns brands like American Eagle and Bushnell, the company witnessed profits tumble by 27 percent in the first three months of 2017. Gun-makers Sturm, Ruger & Co. and American Outdoor Brands lost roughly a quarter of their market value shortly after Trump’s win. And earlier this month, just two days prior to the shooting in Parkland, Remington Outdoor Co. – one of the nation’s longest-running and most distinguished gun manufacturers – said it would seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection due to abysmal sales.

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So, in light of those facts, it’s easy to imagine a gun manufacturing company like Spike’s Tactical feeling compelled to resort to marketing fear. But: “You know, we actually don’t attempt to sell panic at all,” says Leleux, general manager at Spike’s Tactical. While Cope, with his Labrador-like personality, leans on lofty generalizations, Leleux is quick and straight to the point. “I mean, last year we did a dual ad with Pipe Hitters, and it was of shooting at an ISIS guy, another terrorist group,” Leleux says. “It didn’t get much attention, but when we did it, we thought: This might offend some people. But that wasn’t the intent. That’s just how we feel.” Both Leleux and Cope bring up a man named Dwayne Dixon. Following the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in August, Dixon – a professor of Asian Studies at the University of North Carolina and member of Defend Durham, a leftist organization that fights white supremacy – posted a picture on Facebook with the caption: “I

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take perverse pleasure in having carried this Spike’s lower [a part of the AR-15 rifle] in the defense of Justice Park on Aug. 12. I used this rifle to chase off James Fields [the alt-right demonstrator who drove his car through the group of protesters] from our block of 4th St. before he attacked the marchers to the south. Spike’s needs a good lesson in ethics and antifascism.” A week later, Dixon brandished his assault rifle during an impromptu protest in downtown Durham, which took shape after local officials warned of a KKK demonstration that never materialized. He was charged with bringing a weapon to a parade or rally. That charge was dropped after Dixon’s attorney argued the state law infringed on his constitutional rights. However, that post by Dixon following the Charlottesville march, since deleted, proves that Spike’s Tactical may be in the right, Leleux says. He and Cope both imagine that Fields could have simply been afraid when he drove his car into the protesters, murdering one.

“Someone’s chasing you with guns. You get a block away. You’re at a dead stop. All of a sudden you hear a loud bang, because – it’s on video – someone hits your car with a stick, and it’s a mob,” Leleux says. “And he gassed it.” “We’ve saved him from spending his life in prison,” Cope says, as Leleux casts a skeptical side-eye in Cope’s direction. “Maybe, maybe not,” Leleux responds. “Maybe the facts don’t go that way.” Leleux continues, backtracking subtly: “Is it possible he did it out of hate? Absolutely. Everyone deserves for the truth to come out, and if the truth comes out partly because of our ad, then that makes me really happy.” In fact, the truth did come out, but it wasn’t due to their ad. Months before Orlando Weekly sat down with the fellows at Spike’s Tactical, during a hearing in December for Fields (who was charged with second-degree murder), CNN reported that prosecutors played the surveillance video from a Charlottesville restaurant as


well as a video from a Virginia State Police helicopter that was monitoring that day’s events. According to the footage, Fields’ Dodge Challenger stopped about a block and a half away from the protesters before he threw it into reverse and floored it. From there, Fields was reportedly apprehended about four minutes after the collision, about a mile away. OW reached out to Dixon for comment, but Dixon waved off comment due to ongoing legal tension. But he did leave OW with one comment: In an email, Dixon writes, “I will say it’s a Nazi conspiracy and relaying it only legitimates their attempt to paint Fields and their larger genocidal movement as a victim. … It’s revealing that Spike’s sides with the white supremacists and thus they seek to justify Heather Heyer’s murder.”

Cast in their best light, the folks behind Spike’s Tactical and Pipe Hitters Union’s marketing campaign are just superskilled trolls.

OW followed up with Cope on the lawsuit against Newsweek and Vice News he had mentioned. Several days later, Cope replied via email: “As far as the libel suit is concerned, we aren’t currently pursuing it,” he wrote. “The verbiage [Newsweek and Vice News] used, while overtly suggestive, was strategically defensible on their part. So even being unscrupulous and unethical, it’s just not worth our time to pursue.” It was similar language, although a tad more sophisticated, to what he and Leleux used in the Spike’s Tactical office. “We’re not Nazis. He’s married to a Mexican,” Leleux said, looking at Cope. “That’s not Nazi values. I’ve dated nothing but Spanish women until my wife.” They both laughed. But outside the parallel universe that is Spike’s Tactical, gun enthusiasts are becoming more of a minority than it would seem inside that universe. According to a poll conducted by CBS News in 2016, following the Pulse nightclub massacre, only 36 percent of U.S. adults

either own a firearm or live with someone who does, at the time a near-40-year low. Gun ownership is down at least 17 points from the highest recorded rate, in 1994, and nearly 10 percentage points from 2012. What’s more, just 3 percent of American adults own half of the nation’s firearms, according to a Harvard-Northeastern survey conducted in 2016. The NRA isn’t blind to these trends in gun ownership, and it’s done everything possible to avoid becoming obsolete. “[The NRA] is waging this very aggressive, culturally based advertising campaign,” says Gabor, the Palm Beach County-based criminologist. “Fear is basically the approach they use to try to sell guns. And not just to new people who don’t have guns, but to the person who already has an arsenal.” That problem most recently came to a head on Feb. 14, in the school shooting in Broward County. Carrying a semiautomatic AR-15, 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz pulled the fire alarm in the hallway of his

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former school and began to gun down his former classmates. The Valentine’s Day killing spree ended the lives of 17 students and faculty members, and more than a dozen others were critically injured. During the senseless tragedy, several students pulled out their smartphones and began recording. In one video, while blood seeps across the classroom’s tile floor, the sound of the assault rifle bellows out. These shots, however, don’t come within a second of one another (one Mississippi … two Mississippi), and there’s no lead trap to absorb the bullets’ momentum. These shots came in bursts of three, four, sometimes more, with only bodies to absorb the bullets, like those in the Vietnam-era military reports. Wham-wham-wham. Wham-whamwham-wham. Wham. The ringing of firepower on flesh starts again and stops again. The sound of the students’ screams chimes in between. xpeters@orlandoweekly.com

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BY SETH KUBERSKY SAMANTHA DIGEORGE | PHOTO BY SETH KUBERSKY

There’s barely 24 hours left

until the first preview performance of Proof at Theater on the Edge, and Samantha DiGeorge is doing the windows. I’m watching as she stands on the covered porch of a brick-walled Chicago home, painstakingly spritzing the century-old panes. She doesn’t carry cleanser in her spray bottle, but watery brownish-yellow acrylic paint, with which she’s simulating decades of dirty rain. And though the wooden floor and ceiling above and below her are authentic (save for the cunningly crafted cutouts to accommodate lighting fixtures), the 1,300 weathered bricks surrounding her are actually hand-worked slices of styrofoam that she individually placed and airbrushed. These are just a few of the seemingly infinite layers of realistic detail that scenic designer DiGeorge has lavished on her latest labor of love, which supports David Auburn’s award-winning dramedy about math and mental illness through the end of March. Sam’s hyper-realistic sets helped the company she co-founded with her husband/producer/director Marco DiGeorge earn our pick for “Best New Theater Company of 2017,” and any experienced designer would be proud to claim them in their portfolio. So imagine my surprise when DiGeorge told me (while she and set builder Christopher Ivers applied finishing touches) that not only is she entirely selftaught, but her subtly surreal junk shop for 2016’s American Buffalo was the first theatrical set she’d ever designed in her entire life. Before diving headlong into set design, DiGeorge spent a dozen years in the corporate world of banking. She had no prior experience or education in art, aside from being an obsessive decorator for Halloween. “I was always a very curious

The work of self-taught set designer Samantha DiGeorge helps make Theater on the Edge one of the best companies in Orlando person, and into researching. Growing up, if my radio broke I’d take it apart and fix it. I like to figure things out in my own way,” says DiGeorge. “I have it in my head what it’s supposed to look like, but because I’ve never studied I don’t know what techniques are out there. Really it’s just trial and error.” Those experimental efforts have included a theme park-quality texture effect DiGeorge created on those aforementioned foam bricks, which she accomplished inexpensively with a hot air gun. DiGeorge’s self-education has also taken her into some unexpected subjects: “I’ve had to learn building codes, I’ve had to learn woodworking … I’ve had to research what plants I can use to withstand certain weather.” A mother of four with a shock of blue hair, a Deathly Hallows tattoo and a love of unicorns (“the dark ones, not the fluffy kind”), DiGeorge is refreshingly down-to-earth for a scenic savant, but she also exudes an empowering (or slightly intimidating) sense of self-confidence: “I go off of instinct, and feel like I absolutely can figure it out. It’s not to say that it’s not challenging, but I’m gonna do it, and it’s going to be at the highest level.” According to Marco DiGeorge, the majority of Theater on the Edge’s produc-

tion budgets go into Sam’s sets, with the rest mostly directed towards royalties and actor stipends. But without any major grant support, DiGeorge has become a skilled scavenger of estate sales, garage sales and antique shops as far away as Virginia, with an assist from the Offer Up app. “When I go purchase things, people will say, ‘It’s not in that great of condition, I need to clean it up.’ I’m like, ‘Don’t touch it!’” DiGeorge also credits kismet for her creative success, saying that “every show has its little piece of magic in it for me, and it’s something I don’t look for, but it reveals itself to me.” A fridge she found for Superior Donuts had a “superior” label inside; the prop book “Phillip” read in Orphans features a protagonist by the same name. “I feel like I get these little things that the universe just gives to me, which makes it extra special,” she says, acknowledging that while the audience may be unaware of such Easter eggs, they influence the cast. “It may seem like a nuance that’s not a big deal, but for us it is.” That unconscious influence must have been in effect at the following evening’s preview, because after years of experiencing unsatisfying minimalist productions of Proof, I finally enjoyed the play. That’s due in large part to Marco DiGeorge’s cinematic direction, as well as the intense onstage energy between Megan Raitano and her castmates Allan Whitehead, Elaitheia Quinn and Barry Wright. But without the grounding of Samantha DiGeorge’s set, I would have struggled to sustain my suspended disbelief through the story’s Lifetime Movie-worthy moments. So save a round of applause for the grimy windows, because the best supporting performer at Theater on the Edge never gets to take a bow. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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tip jar

[ food + drink ]

BY FAIYAZ KARA

NEWS Pom Moongauklang, of Pom Pom’s Teahouse and Sandwicheria, makes an appearance on Guy’s Grocery Games featuring, yep, Guy Fieri, but don’t hold that against her. The show airs March 11 at 8 p.m. on the Food Network … The Inquisitor, a new wine label by Orlandoans Laura Fletcher and Christie McLeod, has been released with six wines in its portfolio … Victoria & Albert’s has been given the coveted 2018 Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Award in addition to the AAA Five Diamond Award … Create Your Nature has added smoothies to its lineup of açai bowls and oatmeal bowls.

OPENINGS 1803 Pizza Kitchen will move into the

PHOTO BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

CUPS AND CAKES

enraptured by: a “petite cake” of chocolate salted caramel ($10) crowned with gilded popcorn; a gorgeous chocolate onyx pasPlush patisserie spares no expense in offering the finest try ($) in all its coffee crunch and creamy gold-dusted glory (bonus: it also resembles BY FAIYAZ KARA a poop emoji); and a slab of vanilla-vanilla ($8) cake, an ideal sweet ending to a savory he Vegas-style digs of the most luxe you should know: They run out of dough- meal. Oh yes, savory items are also served here café/bake shop this city has ever nuts fairly quickly – I’ve become addicted seen are unquestionably designed to their plain glazed doughnut ($3), so I – some are pedestrian, like the egg salad to impress. I mean, where else will you find would know. Pairing it with a pour-over of sandwich on a sturdy (not flaky) multigrain a 2,100-pound gold-hued light fixture? Or the El Trapiche Geisha ($5.50) – a honey- croissant ($9), while others, like the chickan 18-seat communal table carved from processed coffee by Onyx Coffee Labs, with en pot pie ($12) bring a wow factor. The pie American walnut? Or pricey porcelain cups whom they have an exclusive agreement is beautifully baked in a rectangular castand saucers from New Zealand’s Acme – is breakfast bliss. Brett Ware, one of the iron dish with fresh spring peas, carrots and & Co.? Or diamond-patterned terrazzo city’s finest authorities on all things Arabica, rainbow potatoes, topped with a generous floors embedded with chips of crushed stands behind the minimalist brewing sys- sheet of pastry. A bowl of creamy roasted tomato-cheese soup ($7) glass knives? It seems the Glass Knife, by tem fashioned by Modbar, veers slightly sweet, but founder/owner/tech CEO Steve Brown, is pouring and pulling fresh that doesn’t take away from blinged out in the hopes Mariah Carey brews much to the delight THE GLASS KNIFE its comforting qualities. will one day annex the pink-walled patis- of bean buffs. 276 S. Orlando Ave., Savory items are served Then there’s execuserie as part of her crib. He’s clearly spared Winter Park during breakfast as well – no expense dressing up his “homage to a tive chef Stuart Whitfield, 407-500-2253 an avocado-egg toast ($11) bygone era,” and I can tell you that after whose résumé includes theglassknife.com with tomato confit and numerous visits here, there’s no cause to stints at Le Cirque, the Four $$ lemon crème fraîche, and Seasons NYC, David Burke dress it down. a cheddar biscuit sandwich I’m not saying it’s perfect, but at least the & Donatella, and Walt folks here try to be. The ordering process, Disney World. His cake creations are daz- ($10) layered with egg soufflé and applefor example, requires a little explanation zling, and hold your gaze like Mimi does wood-smoked bacon, served us well on which they’re happy to give: Place your on New Year’s Eve. There’s the berries one visit. There’s a lovely patio area with transluorder, take a number, then pay your server and cream ($8), with its flawless glaçage only after you’re done eating. Or you can resembling the wax enveloping a round cent roof panels to keep light in and the sun go back up to the counter and pay. Oh, and of Gouda. The strawberry cake is woven out, as well as retractable side panels that if you want to order something else, like with raspberry pâte de fruit, lemon curd block out the setting sun and traffic noise a cake, cookie or pastry, you can just ask and vanilla bean white-chocolate mousse on South Orlando Avenue. And it’s dogyour server, I think, and they’ll bring it to topped with strawberries, blueberries and friendly. Ain’t that just icing on the cake. you. Or something. Whatever. One thing raspberries. Other indulgences we’ve been fkara@orlandoweekly.com

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O’Stromboli’s space in Audubon Park. Look for it to open this month … Another Foxtail Coffee Co. (with drive-through) will open soon on State Road 434 near State Road 436 in Altamonte Springs … Domu’s quick-serve concept called Domu Chibi Ramen will open this winter in the Waterford Lakes Town Center … Look for a steakhouse by 310 Restaurants (working title: “Bovine”) to move into the old Park Plaza Gardens space on Park Avenue … Just up the street, Choulala Fine Pastries hopes to open this month … Latitude & Longitude, the newest restaurant inside the Marriott World Center, features Southern-inspired cuisine utilizing local, seasonal ingredients from area farms and vendors. The hotel’s hydroponic garden is scheduled for completion this spring … The Nook on Robinson is now open for business in the Milk District.

EVENTS Cress Restaurant hosts a Heritage Pork & Wagyu Beef Dinner March 16 at 5:30 p.m. Cost is $75; $105 with wine pairings … Tickets are still available for the Women in the Kitchen: Legends, Mentors and Friends event March 18 at Lake Meadow Naturals. The Rusty Spoon’s Kathleen Blake hosts numerous JBF Award-winning chefs in the event supporting the James Beard Foundation’s work in advancing women in the culinary industry. Tickets are $150. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com

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PHOTO BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

CLASSIC:

THE PIÑA COLADA BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

I

f you don’t like piña coladas (or getting caught in the rain), you’re not alone. The classic tropical pineapple-coconut concotion is too often a cloyingly sugary slush, one that gives you a headache double-header: the first one right away via brain freeze; the second later via hangover, if you drink more than one or two. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Pineapple and coconut are both fruits. Well, coconut is apparently a fruit, a nut and a seed, but the point is that they both start out as fresh things from trees, while the cocktail is usually built from their sad second life as overly processed things from cans. To freshen up the piña colada as befits its could-be-healthy status wasn’t difficult. You could, if you want-

ed to, start with a fresh pineapple and an uncracked coconut, but I didn’t go that far. Instead of super-sweet Coco Lopez, I used plain old coconut milk – from a can, yes, but not quite as processed and no sugar or gelatin added. Instead of canned pineapple chunks or juice, I used high-quality frozen pineapple chunks. (The extra dollar for the good stuff is worth it; the chunks will be slightly less fibrous and blend more smoothly.) I added a scoop of avocado for extra creaminess, a handful of herbs for extra flavor, and some Chartreuse to the traditional rum to round out that herbal freshness. Rupert Holmes and his lady would be happy to sip a few of these, rain or no. jyoung@orlandoweekly.com

• 3 ounces Coco Lopez (canned sweetened coconut cream) • 6 ounces pineapple juice • 1 1⁄2 ounces white rum • 1 ounce dark rum • fruit for garnish Pour all ingredients into a blender with crushed ice, and blend until smooth. Pour into chilled hurricane glass. Garnish with pineapple wedge, maraschino cherry and tiny paper umbrella.

REMIXED: • • • • • •

2 1/2 ounces gold rum 1/2 ounce Chartreuse 1/2 ounce brown sugar simple syrup 3 ounces coconut milk 1/4 ripe avocado Double handful of frozen pineapple chunks (roughly 4 ounces by weight) • Handful each fresh basil and mint Place all ingredients in blender and blend until smooth. (The herbs will show as green flecks, and that’s OK; don’t overblend or use a Vitamix, or you’ll melt the drink.) Pour into a big glass or Mason jar and serve with a straw. orlandoweekly.com

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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

$$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$

$10 OR LESS

The price range generally reflects the average cost of one dinner entree. Bakeries, ice cream shops, etc. reflect $15-$25 relative cost for one person. Search hundreds more $25 OR MORE reviews at orlandoweekly.com

$10-$15

EL BUDA

Chef Roberto Treviño’s dishes fuse Latin and Asian flavors and the results are nothing short of remarkable, be they dumpling of pork and plantains; ropa vieja bibimbap; churrasco with ho fun noodles, or edamame frito. On most days, Treviño will improvise off-menu dishes, and if dumplings con coco or sushi-grade tuna in Sichuan-pepita sauce make an appearance, order it. Either way, don’t pass on the duck breast with miso-honey potatoes. Desserts lean toward the Latin. Closed Mondays. 116 W. Church St., 407-203-8171; $$$

PETER’S KITCHEN CHINA BISTRO

From the man that brought us Tasty Wok and Ming’s Bistro comes Peter Leung’s namesake house of Hong Kong delights. Dim sum is a popular draw on weekends, but dim sum items can also be ordered daily for lunch, be they dumplings, chicken feet, turnip cakes, custard buns, rice noodle rolls or stellar eggplant stuffed with fried shrimp. Can’t-miss items: butter lobster and beef chow fun, though less adventurous palates will gravitate toward buzzy orange chicken. Open daily. 3922 E. Colonial Drive, 407-895-8174; $$

PEPPINO’S ORGANIC ITALIAN KITCHEN & PIZZERIA

This “organic” Hourglass District eatery bustles with a great energy and conviviality thanks to gregarious owner Pete Priola. Straight-up comfort classics like top-notch arancini and linguine with clam sauce pack ’em in. Sandwiches are made with ciabatta and multigrain bread from Olde Hearth; pizzas – doughy cousins to Neapolitanstyle pies – are decent. Closed Sundays. 2420 Curry Ford Road, 407-203-5467; $$

KADENCE

From the trio that brought us Kappo comes Kadence, a nine-seat stunner serving superlative, multicourse omakases. Ingredients are ever-changing and are flown in twice, sometimes thrice, weekly from Japan; what they do with them is why a visit here is a must for any Japanophile. Sushi-only lunches go for $61-$75 and feature 12 pieces, soup, and dessert. 1809 E. Winter Park Road, kadenceorlando.com; $$$$

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FOUR REBELS AMERICAN TACO KITCHEN & BAR

At this Mills Park taco joint fillings can be interesting, including inventive takes like fried green tomato, mojo pork, fried chicken and ribeye, but the manufactured flour tortillas are a bit of a bust. Elotes slathered in avocado crema and nachos with crispy chips are worth an order, but don’t expect to see any jalapeños: They’re not offered. There is a full bar and a daily dessert from Se7en Bites. Open daily. 1618 N. Mills Ave., 407-601-6575; $$

REYES MEZCALERIA

On the heels of Seito Sushi and Osprey Tavern, Jason and Sue Chin give us a Mexican concept that, thankfully, isn’t tired. True flavors from various regions of Mexico come out in such dishes as duck breast with mole negro, tostadas with yellowfin tuna or braised short rib, wonderfully moist tamales, and fried yuca with carnitas. Don’t pass on veg chile rellenos stuffed with beans, queso Oaxaca and grilled corn, or red chile enchiladas with short rib and pumpkin. Taco lovers: Don’t forget to ask your server for double tortillas. Open daily. 821 N. Orange Ave., 407-868-9007; $$$

MARKET ON MAGNOLIA

The former Frank & Stein’s spot now houses three fast-casual concepts. Da Kine Poke’s second location serves up signature and custom poke bowls; 081 Wood Fired Pizza’s pies are stellar (don’t miss the Vegetale pie); and finally, a downtown outpost of Gnarly Barley’s not-to-be-missed sandwiches and salads. Also, find a full row of local and regional microbrews along the north wall flanked by sportsball-spewing TVs. 150 S. Magnolia Ave., 407-412-9230; $$

ORLANDO MEATS

Part butchery, part eatery, this Virginia Drive meat house offers all the interesting cuts flesh-starved gastronomes crave, as well as a menu showcasing locally procured meats. Burger purists ought to try their hefty medium-rare burger (the juice will fly), while sausage hounds will have a field day with any of the available offerings, be it the currywurst, chicken nugget or, our fave, twin venison sausages stuffed inside a New England roll. Bonus: They open for breakfast too. Closed Mondays. 728 Virginia Drive, 407-598-0700; $$

BOCAS GRILL

Pan-Latin restaurant spins a bit of Asian influence into the mix with stellar wokfried rice, but arepas are king here. The pabellón criollo arepa holds the holy trinity of shredded beef, black beans and sweet plantains, along with plenty of white cheese. Milkshakes are towering and ridiculous, but so is the torta tres leches served with a vanilla ice cream cone and a syringe of condensed milk. Be still my beating (for now) heart. 7600 Dr. Phillips Blvd., 407-723-8351; $$ n

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[ film + tv ] FILM LISTINGS Cult Classics: Grosse Pointe Blank A hitman (John Cusack) attends his 10-year high school reunion and tries to rekindle romance with his ex (Minnie Driver) while avoiding a vengeful assassin (Dan Aykroyd). Tuesday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407629-0054; enzian.org. A Fantastic Woman Chilean film about a trans woman (Daniela Vega) who must navigate her lover’s family after he dies. (Vega won an Oscar last Sunday for the role.) Through March 15; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.

JONESING FOR MORE

ulterior motives – begin to weave together. But the pacing turns out to be the show’s Achilles heel once again. Threads established in one episode may lie by the Marvel’s Jessica Jones finally returns to Netflix wayside for two or three more episodes after a three-year wait before being picked up again when convenient for the plot. BY T HA DDEUS MCCOL LU M The show also suffers from the lack hree years ago, back when it seemed of the best achievements of the Marvel of a compelling villain. It would be pretthe Netflix-Marvel partnership Cinematic Universe. Jones is still sar- ty hard to top David Tennant’s turn as could do no wrong, the first season donic and brooding, walking the fine the depraved mind-controlling villain of Jessica Jones was an absolute knockout. line between asshole and hero with just Kilgrave from the first season, but it’s The partnership between Netflix, Marvel enough misanthropic charm to keep the almost like the showrunners acknowledge this by not even trying. Instead, and ABC Studios had already redeemed audience hoping for the best. As Season 2 starts, Jones is dealing much of the antagonistic focus of the first Daredevil, a character marred by a cheesy 2003 film version starring noted comic- with the aftermath of the end of Season five episodes of the season deals with book character killer Ben Affleck. The 1. Not only does she feel guilty about landlord-tenant disputes and overbeardecision to bring Jones – a character being forced to take lethal action, but now ing stage moms. While we’re barred from practically unknown to anyone unfamiliar everyone in the neighborhood knows she doling out spoilers, the appearance of a cult favorite actor at the end of the fifth with writer Brian Michael Bendis’ comic killed a guy. Meanwhile, best friend Trish Walker episode does bode well for the rest of the book work – to the screen and use her to tell a story about sexual and mental (Rachael Taylor) tries to get Jones to season, however. Luckily, even if Jessica Jones has trouabuse was rightly praised, and it seemed move forward by digging into her past ble figuring out what like Marvel was poised to have a string of and uncovering secrets to do with itself, it at small-screen victories that might rival its about IGH, the shadleast gives us good owy organization that cinematic counterparts. JESSICA JONES company while it Then Daredevil’s second season suf- might be responsible Season 2 figures things out. fered from a lot of pacing issues. And for giving Jones her All episodes streaming on Netflix While Taylor and Luke Cage did the same. And all of the super-strength. Taylor Thursday, March 8 Ritter make one sudden, the bottom fell out when Iron Fist was a standout in the of the best female turned out to be a joyless mess with very first season, and it’s sleuth teams on little kung-fu, and the team-up miniseries nice to see a little bit television once The Defenders didn’t really redeem it. In more about Trish’s they actually get to a strange turn of events, the best thing background and how sleuthing, the supMarvel’s put on the screen since the first it mirrors Jones’ trauporting cast – anchored by Eka Darville as season of Jessica Jones turned out to be matic story in subtle ways. In the first five episodes of Season 2, we neighbor-assistant Malcolm Ducasse and The Punisher, a violent but compelling story of revenge and the Department of see the threads of the overarching narra- Moss’ scene-stealing role as Jones’ longtive – the investigation into IGH, a new suffering lawyer – is compelling enough Veterans Affairs. So is the new season of Jessica Jones building super who dislikes superhuman that we don’t even mind waiting – for now, a return to form? Yes and no. Krysten tenants, powerful lawyer Jeri Hogarth anyway. Ritter’s performance as Jones is still one (Carrie-Anne Moss) developing her own tmccollum@orlandoweekly.com

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FilmSlam Monthly showcase of the best in local independent film. Audience votes for each month’s winner. Sunday, 1 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-6290054; enzian.org. Popcorn Flicks in the Park: True Grit Free outdoor screening of the John Wayne western about a young girl who hires a bounty hunter to track down her father’s killer. Thursday, 7 pm; Central Park, Winter Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; free; enzian.org. Represent: Women in Film – Miss Representation Explores the underrepresentation of women in positions of power and influence in America, and challenges the media’s limited portrayal of what it means to be a powerful woman. Tuesday, 11:30 am; West Oaks Library, 1821 E. Silver Star Road; free; 407521-3330; ocls.info. The Rich Weirdoes Present: The Rocky Horror Picture Show Screening of the cult classic with a shadow cast, props and callbacks. Friday-Saturday, 11:15 pm; AMC CityWalk, 6000 Universal Blvd.; $11; richweirdoes.com. Saturday Matinee Classics: Fitzcarraldo Werner Herzog’s film about an Irishman in South America who dreams of building an opera house. But to achieve his dream, he ends up having to pull a steamboat over a mountain. Saturday, 11 am; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie Digitally remastered version of the 2004 anime box office hit. Sunday, 12:55 pm, Monday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com.

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ON SCREENS IN ORLANDO

Gringo

BY ST EVE SCHN EID ER THIS WEEK: Gringo Corporate intrigue and kidnapping surround the development of a new form of medical marijuana that’s offered in the shape of a pill. Working title: Snoop Forges a Scrip. (R) The Hurricane Heist The Fast and the Furious creator Rob Cohen shows us what would happen if a bunch of intrepid crooks tried to rob a U.S. mint facility during a Cat 5, and the only people left to stop them were the sort of folks who hang around during a Cat 5. In this case, that includes Shannon from Lost and the guy who took over from Andy Serkis doing mocap for King Kong. Root for the hurricane. (PG-13) The Party The escalator pitch: It’s Peter’s Friends with a gun. A bunch of Brits have a small get-together that provides a platform for the airing of all sorts of dangerous secrets and festering resentments. A nominee for the Golden Bear, or the Purple Communist, or whatever the hell they call their awards over there. (R) The Strangers: Prey at Night I was really expecting better from Christina Hendricks post-Mad Men than being Queen of the Sequels You Won’t Even Redbox. But on the heels of Bad Santa 2 comes Prey at Night, in which the erstwhile Joan Holloway is part of a family terrorized by three masked assailants in a trailer park. Joanie, Joanie … that Peggy still gets such nice work. Are you sure you’re even trying? (R) Thoroughbreds The late Anton “Ensign Chekov” Yelchin’s last screen role is as a ne’er-do

well hired as a hitman by a couple of teenage girls. The picture wasn’t screened for Orlando critics, and the studio didn’t even email us a synopsis. Christ, even Spock got a funeral. (R) A Wrinkle in Time In which we learn the answer to the most pressing question of our time: If Oprah Winfrey fucked up your favorite book, would you have the guts to say so? Having no such emotional connection to the material, I can say that the bits we’ve seen already look like the cut scenes from a Strawberry Shortcake single-shooter game, and the “diversity” angle seems cloyingly belabored (and this is coming from a guy who thought there were too many white people in Black Panther). But hey, your wrinklage may vary. (PG) ALSO PLAYING: Dance Academy: The Comeback In this spinoff of the Australian TV series Dance Academy, an injured ballet student strives to keep her dream alive. See, in Russia, they just find second careers giving blow jobs for the FSB. Right, J-Law? (NR) Nostalgia Jon Hamm headlines an ensemble drama about letting go of people and things. You know, just like Christina Hendricks is letting go of her career. (R) The Vanishing of Sidney Hall Experiencing fabulous success right out of the gate turns out to be the worst thing that could have happened to a young novelist, who attains cultural godhead in his 20s and becomes a mysterious recluse in his 30s. See, kids? Just say no to books! (R) orlandoweekly.com

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[ concert preview ] Following extensive training to become a missionary, Klopp realized organized religion was not for him. “If it doesn’t make you happier, your heart’s not in it,” he says. And he wasn’t happy. The strain from trying to resurrect his faith had taken a serious toll on his mental health, leading to a cyclical feeling of being “depressed about being depressed.” Frustrated, he began searching for a way out. Klopp’s musical talent provided a means of escape, giving him an outlet to creatively explore the depths of a mind plagued by unanswered questions. His remarkable voice and ability to play multiple instruments enabled him to connect with young folk artists in Provo’s ever-growing music community, where “folk and chamber pop are a pretty happening thing.” He performed with several bands along the way, ultimately writing enough songs to start his own with musicians he’d met over the years. One of those musicians was Chaz Costello, who plays bass in Choir Boy (and in Klopp’s side project, Human Leather) and also works with Klopp at a “dive of a deli” in Salt Lake City. Shortly after they started working together, “[we] had the idea to pool tips so we could put out cassettes for local bands.” In addition to releasing a tape for Chaz’s other band, Sculpture Club, the aptly named Deli Boys Records co-released the first pressing of Choir Boy’s debut album, Passive With Desire, on cassette with New York-based label Team Love Records in October of 2016. Choir Boy finds faith in heavenly dream pop Often compared to artists like Bronski BY TYLER BARNEY Beat, Roxy Music and Tears for Fears, Choir Boy is more than a mere pastiche of dam Klopp’s beginnings as a per- epithet also served as a clever nod to his its new wave predecessors. “I like so many former are, appropriately enough, upbringing in the church. Always one to different styles of music, it’s hard to say steeped in the sacred. Raised in find the silver lining, Klopp turned the what my main influence is,” Klopp reflects, the Mormon church, the vision and voice sour grapes into wine and claimed the adding that he admires the work of Kate Bush, Fleetwood Mac, R. Stevie Moore and behind Salt Lake City-based dream-pop name as his own. After graduating from high school, prolific guitar-pop legend Martin Newell. outfit Choir Boy found his introduction While the music of Choir Boy is rich to music at an early age in the form of tra- Klopp left his hometown of Cleveland, ditional hymns. But even as he sang along Ohio, to attend Brigham Young University, with nostalgia, it doesn’t quite fit in with with the choir and congregation, doubts a private institution in Provo, Utah, owned the current crop of revivalist post-punk and synthpop acts. began to stir in his mind. “It’s hard to say and operated by the “We’re still kind of an Saints when it started,” he says. “I felt like I was a Latter-day outlier,” Klopp notes. church. In an ironic practicing agnostic as a kid.” SOFT KILL “[Our sound] definitely Fast-forward several years to middle twist of faith, his pilwith Choir Boy, Volcanist, leans in a certain direcschool and he was still raising his voice, this grimage to the heart Ootheca tion, [but] I don’t want time to the tune of punk covers in his first of Mormon country 8 p.m. Saturday, March 10 to pander.” If you’re not band. “We covered Dropkick Murphys, we marked the beginning Will’s Pub a believer by now, you did a Ramones song, an Agnostic Front of the end for his 1042 N. Mills Ave. will be soon. Witness song,” he recalls. “It was all over the place. spiritual journey. “It’s willspub.org the sacred spectacle for sometimes easier to We just liked punk in general.” $12-$14 yourself at Will’s Pub, It was during this punk phase that Klopp just coast in limbo when Choir Boy opens inherited the moniker Choir Boy. Meant as than to confront your for post-punk titans and tourmates Soft an insult by his peers, the nickname was doubts,” he admits. But coasting didn’t last for long, and Kill this weekend. inadvertently profound. A fitting title for a young man with the voice of a saint, the eventually his doubts came to a head. music@orlandoweekly.com

BITTERSWEET SYMPHONY

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GREAT LIVE MUSIC RATTLES ORLANDO EVERY NIGHT Senses Fail New Jersey post-hardcore heroes are celebrating new album If There Is Light, It Will Find You with a North American tour featuring comrades Reggie and the Full Effect, Have Mercy and Household. 6 p.m. Wednesday, March 7, at House of Blues, $19

Problem Pack All-star tape release and tour kickoff show for this local snot-punk outfit, complete with sets from Golden Pelicans and Wet Nurse. AND FREE. 9 p.m. Thursday, March 8, at Wally’s, free

Ape Not Kill Ape Noir-y, Birthday Party-esque no wave from this Michigan outfit, playing a gigantic bill with Period Bomb, Sojii, Joy Lane, Bacon Grease and J.A.S.O.N. 9 p.m. Friday, March 9, at Uncle Lou’s, $5

Triathlon Brooklyn indie outfit throws an album release party at Blackstar in the illustrious company of Inner Wave, Transcendental Telecom and DirtBike. 8 p.m. Saturday, March 10, at Blackstar, $10-$12

Elizabeth Baker Baker returns to Timucua with an ambitious program of solo piano pieces: her own works alongside those of John Cage and her collaborator Erich Barganier. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 11, at Timucua White House, $10-$20 suggested donation

Wind and the Wave Austinite duo Dwight Baker and Patricia Lynn craft cinematic indie-folk that revels in different textures and tones; they’re being groomed for next-big-thing-ness. 7 p.m. Monday, March 12, at the Social, $12-$15

Romeo Santos Former Aventura vocalist and King of Bachata Santos is taking his chosen genre to worldwide superstardom and the pop mainstream. All hail the CEO of Roc Nation Latin. 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 13, at Amway Center, $36-$396

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BY B AO L E - H U U BIG BUSINESS | PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

BIG BUSINESS AND BUILDINGS, THE ABBEY, FEB. 25

Among ongoing news of the major tide of new music venues opening this year, one recent development worth watching is downtown venue the Abbey. It’s not new at all, but its variety programming (which ranges from cabaret to comedy to theater) hasn’t historically had much intersection with the city’s rock circuit. If recent shows there are any omen, however, that could be changing. A swell of notable indie promoters like Norsekorea Presents, For Your Friends Booking and Endoxa Booking have lately held concerts in the spacious and comfortable room, the kind that can stick a bit of real culture and edge to the yups of Thornton Park. This time, Endoxa brought in one of the most tasteful samplings of the heavy underground, easily one of the best bills seen this year. Headlining were West Coast alternative-metal leviathans Big Business, the gruesome twosome that packs one of the best pound-for-pound punches in rock. Though they’ve done exciting things over their career like doubling in size and joining the Melvins, their true essence has always been as a two-piece band, where they’ve struck a balance between muscle and economy that’s as optimum as anyone’s ever achieved. And their return to original form as a duo was a reminder of their genius, a magic that is all animalism and athleticism. These guys have long been on the vanguard of groundbreaking bands proving that heavy music need not be sludgy

West Coast alternative-metal leviathans Big Business are a gruesome twosome that packs one of the best pound-for-pound punches in rock or viscid. In the case of Big Business, it comes like an airstrike. Although it seems only deep heads know it, they’ve proven to be trailblazers throughout their career. And if this were a just world, these guys would get the recognition and celebration that Torche enjoys. Also sharing a similar fate is Minneapolis’ Buildings, one of the most underrated yet best noise-rock bands in the game right now. Straight out of the noise-rock mecca of Minneapolis, this knockout trio finally returned to remind me they floored me when they played Will’s Pub five years ago. Unlike the scum and infection of the Jesus Lizard or Unsane, Buildings’ distilled attack kills with concentration, not lunacy. More slash than smear, this shit is in full control, of itself and you. It’s high-wire rage that hits more like a missile than a bomb. Besides this way-legit wrecking ball of a show, last week saw the likes of KRS-One, AJJ (fka Andrew Jackson Jihad) and Shellshag roll through the Abbey. So add this venue’s calendar to your area concert sweep and you could be surprised from time to time.

1000MODS AND TELEKINETIC YET, WILL’S PUB, FEB. 28

Whatever their name may evoke, Greek hard-rockers 1000mods have about as much to do with dapper scooter boys as 1000 Homo DJs have to do with fabulous turntablists. Instead, these riff riders roll with heavy intent. While this tour is North America’s first live look at them, 1000mods have been crushing for over a decade. And they arrived as an exceptionally finished squad, dropping tonnage with heft, fuzz and killer precision. Their stoner rock is already a well-calibrated beast, as heavy as it gets without losing its rock & roll. But add the fact that they’re a total machine of execution live and you’ve got something that comes on like a fit, groomed mammoth. It was a stunning debut that proved that 1000mods could be one of the ripest undiscovered heavy bands out there right now. Also making a pretty nuclear Florida debut of their own were Iowa tourmates Telekinetic Yeti. Unlike the usual lean muscle that typically defines two-piece bands, this stoner doom act deals in epic widescreen rock that can go from heroic Wolfmother stampedes to heavy-lidded odysseys. Live, though, their sound is considerably, beautifully dirtier. The tsunami riffs come with much more hair and teeth. They’re nimble but gigantic, triumphant yet tough. And they will deafen you. There are plenty of good ones out there, but Telekinetic Yeti are one of the absolute heaviest two-piece wrecking crews alive. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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Wednesday, March 7

Lip Sync for Lungs COMEDY

“It’s for a good cause” isn’t typically a tempting reason to buy a ticket, but how about “It’s for a good cause and it’s going to be goddamn hilarious”? This celebrity lip-sync battle benefiting the American Lung Association has a stacked lineup, with performances by the loquacious Steve Gunter (owner of the Dubsdread Tap Room), trial attorney Tony Sos (a born performer) and Mike Bianchi, the Orlando Sentinel’s “God is a Gators fan” sports columnist. Our money’s on former Orange County comptroller Martha Haynie, though, who’s performing as part of a trio with Nancy Robbinson and Linda Kobert of OCPS. Any woman who can get elected as a Republican seven times while challenging unchecked county spending and speaking up for marriage equality, Planned Parenthood and Hillary Clinton is a woman NOT to be underestimated. – Jessica Bryce Young 6:30 p.m. | SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave. | lipsyncforlungsorlando.org | $35-$50

Friday, March 9

Permanent Makeup MUSIC

St. Petersburg’s Permanent Makeup have long been standard-bearers for the independent music ethos in South Florida – and for that matter, the state in general – balancing aesthetics and activism in their music and business practices: championing DIY spaces, inclusivity, all-ages shows and progressive thinking in general. The band recently released their new album, Scrape, an encapsulation of a sound that draws as much from Fugazi and Truman’s Water as from the Red Krayola and Unwound. Live, it’s total explosion time. Last time the trio came through town, they played the Space Station, so they’re gonna be in for a wee bit of a surprise at the ambitious Odd Jobs/Blackstar complex. Onward and upward. – Matthew Moyer with the Palmettes, TV Dinner | 8 p.m. | Odd Jobs, 42 W. Concord St. | theblackstar.club | free

Saturday, March 10

Rockin’ Robinson MUSIC

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The Milk District became an official Main Street District last year, and for those wondering what that actually means, look no further than this weekend’s Rockin’ Robinson festival. Using the clout of the Main Street program, the organizers were able to pull a permit to close down a stretch of Robinson Street for a street party – no small feat since Robinson is owned by the Florida Department of Transportation rather than the city. The festival features 18 musical acts setting up onstage and offering everything from groovy jams (the Groove Orient, Leisure Chief) to country (Prison Wine) to a hip-hop collaboration between MC B.T.R.U.E., beatboxer/looper Rubox and bassist Dave Mann (called B-TRubox Mann, obviously). Along with plenty of bars, food trucks and vendors, it’s a testament to the diversity of the Little Main Street That Could. – Thaddeus McCollum 4 p.m.-2 a.m. | The Milk District, East Robinson Street and North Bumby Avenue | rockinrobinson.com | $10-$35

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Saturday, March 10

Fitzcarraldo FILM

Fitzcarraldo is, if you’ll overlook the coinage, the Herzog-iest of all Werner Herzog’s films. It stars Klaus Kinski – the Herzog-iest of actors – as an Irish rubber planter in Amazonian Peru, whose doomed attempt to make enough money to build an opera house in the jungle finds him (actually, hundreds of indigenous workers) hauling a steamship over a mountain. (Hey guys, it’s a metaphor!) Upon its 1982 release, the New York Times called the movie “a stunning spectacle” and “a madman’s dream,” and as stories began to leak out of the remarkable toll illness and injury took on the production, the idea that it was cursed only enhanced the film’s reputation. Spooky stuff aside, it’s a risky, tragicomic miracle and the chance to see it on the big screen – and hear the soundtrack, a mix of Popol Vuh, Puccini and Pagliacci – is to be grabbed with both hands. – JBY 11 a.m. | Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-0054 | enzian.org | $8

Saturday-Sunday, March 10-11

Leu Gardens Annual Plant Sale EVENTS

Mother Nature knows best, and with that, she knows that it’s for the best if you take a stroll around this 50-acre botanical oasis during their annual plant sale. Their goal, to inspire visitors to appreciate and understand plants, is simple. But their annual sale – featuring more than 50 growers and vendors with displays set up so that nature lovers can feel free to peruse – is far more than that. So bring a wagon or plant cart in case you purchase more than you can carry by hand, and make sure to bring cash too – because like Mother Nature, the vendors are partial to keeping it green. – Xander Peters 9 a.m.-5 p.m. | Harry P. Leu Gardens, 1920 N. Forest Ave. | 407-246-2620 | leugardens.org | free

Tuesday, March 13

Tommy Stinson’s Cowboys in the Campfire

PHOTO BY DEVVON SIMPSON

MUSIC

Firebrand garage punk Tommy Stinson – he of both Replacements AND Guns N’ Roses ill-repute – rolled through the City Beautiful last year with his culty early-’90s project Bash & Pop, amply proving that he had lost none of the grit that made him such a unique figure in the American alternative rock landscape. Something about Orlando must have agreed with him, because he’s coming through town again almost a year later with his Cowboys in the Campfire duo with Chip Roberts. It’s the polar opposite of GNR’s stadium bloat or the reunion nostalgia circuit: a beyond low-key romp through record stores, gallery spaces and sundry nonconventional venues, where Stinson and Roberts will casually workshop new songs from a forthcoming album. This is one of two Florida shows, and you get to shop for records before and after the music. Let’s ramble, ramblers. – MM 9 p.m. | Park Ave CDs, 2916 Corrine Drive | 407-447-7275 | parkavecds.com | $15-$17

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THEWEEK

Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com at least 12 days before print to have them included

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7-TUESDAY, MARCH 13 COMPILED BY THADDEUS MCCOLLUM

MUSIC WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7 Coast Modern, the Technicolors, Netherfriends 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $29.50; 407-246-1419. Jonn Del Toro Richardson Band 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Old Country Irish Session 7:30 pm; The Harp & Celt, 25 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; 407-481-2928. Senses Fail, Reggie and the Full Effect, Have Mercy, Household 6 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $19; 407-934-2583. Staying Alive: One Night of the Bee Gees 8 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $27-$57; 407-228-1220. The Strange Trip 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Jason Mraz Tuesday at the Dr. Phillips Center

Vegan Butcher, Kaupe, Intoxicated 7 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Yaasss! The Party 9 pm; Loud Gallery, 1907 N. Orange Ave.; $7.33; 407-218-1672.

THURSDAY, MARCH 8 Bobby Koelble Trio 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-636-9951. Boston Marriage, Boysin, Letters to Part 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $8-$10. La Etnnia, Ali Aka Mind 9 pm; Simon Parrilla Bar & Grill, 1187 Florida Mall Ave., Suite 128; $15-$20; 407-203-2982. Problem Pack, Golden Pelicans, Wet Nurse 9 pm; Wally’s Mills Avenue Liquors, 1001 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-896-6975.

Pusho & D.Enyel 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; 407-504-7699.

BoxWine Blackout, Sims Volour, Eely Pete 10 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; $5 suggested donation; 407-423-3060.

Ricardo Montaner 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $69-$300; 407-351-5483.

Daniel Saylor, Xyloglyph, Dan Mason 9 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364. Eastern Bloc: Arapu, Ediz 10 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. Colonial Drive; $8. The Hunna, Coasts 6:30 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $17-$20; 407-246-1419.

Robin Trower, Damon Fowler 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $39.50-$64.50; 407-228-1220.

SATURDAY, MARCH 10 Andy McKee 8 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $29.50-$39.50. Baauer 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; 407-504-7699.

Orlando Rocks: Run Raquel, Raising Cadence, A Brilliant Lie, Broken Streetlights 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $5; 407-934-2583.

Beers of a Tyrant: Don Bear, the Schitt, Tears of a Tyrant 9 pm; Orlando Brewing, 1301 Atlanta Ave.; free; 321-278-0452.

FRIDAY, MARCH 9

Period Bomb, Sojii, Ape Not Kill Ape, Joylane, Bacon Grease, Jas 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-270-9104.

Classic Albums Live: Led Zeppelin II 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $24; 407-351-5483.

The 502s, Kolars, Escondido, O’rchard 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10.

Permanent Makeup, the Palmettes, TV Dinner 9 pm; Odd Jobs, 46 W. Concord St.; free.

Color Me Wet 10 pm-3 am; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $24-$94; 714-504-8203.

Sean Holcomb 6 pm; The Veranda at Thornton Park, 111 N. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-872-8454.

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Body//Talk: Spirit Maps, Jordan X Randall, DJ La Patilla 9 pm; Iron Cow, 2438 E. Robinson St.; $7-$10.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● orlandoweekly.com


Shane Torres Shane Torres Feeling blue after the end of last week’s Orlando Indie Comedy Fest? The laughs don’t have to end. This week, the Bull & Bush snags national comedian Shane Torres for an intimate set on the Matt Gersting Stage. You may have seen him on Conan or Comedy Bang Bang, but you’re more likely to have heard your hack friends steal his bit that asks, “What did Guy Fieri ever do to anyone?” 9 p.m. Friday; Bull & Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; $10; bullandbushorlando.com

Dua Lipa

Orlando Whiskey Festival Ready to give up your passion for anything but brown liquor, but don’t want people to think you’re low-class? Dress up for a whiskey festival at a luxury car dealership. The Orlando Whiskey Festival lets you sample fine scotch and bourbon in the fancy confines of a Mercedes-Benz dealership. And we are duty-bound to say that we strongly disapprove, but there are plenty of flavored “whiskies” to try, too. 7-10 p.m. Saturday; Mercedes-Benz of Orlando, 810 N. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $50-$245; orlandowhiskeyfestival.com

Color Me Wet One of the biggest lesbian paint parties on the East Coast descends on Parliament House this weekend. Color Me Wet features gorgeous dancers, celebrity DJs and entertainers, drag shows, and a whole lot of colored paint flying everywhere. Book a hotel room onsite for the full experience. 10 p.m. Saturday; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $24-$94; eastcoasteden.com

Baauer Hey, remember the Harlem Shake? Not the actual dance, but that viral video trend from 2013 that inspired managers across the country to force employees to pretend to like each other long enough to dance unenthusiastically for the sake of “team-building.” Philadelphia DJ Baauer does, since his song was used in every single one of those videos. See him at Gilt this weekend and – well, you know. 10 p.m. Saturday; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; gilt.ticketingking.com

June 13 at House of Blues

PHOTO BY NICOLE NODLAND

Little Dragon, March 14 at the Beacham

Betty Who, March 29 at the Social

Damien Escobar, April 19 at Plaza Live

Mike Birbiglia, May 12 at the Plaza Live

Celebrating David Bowie, March 15 at the Plaza Live

Miguel, March 29 at the Plaza Live

Modest Mouse, April 20 at Hard Rock Live

Guided by Voices, May 16 at the Social

Broken Social Scene, March 30 at House of Blues

Minus the Bear, April 20 at the Beacham

New Found Glory, May 17 at House of Blues

Anita Baker, March 16 at the Dr. Phillips Center Dan Rather, March 17 at Hard Rock Live Mike & the Mechanics, March 19 at the Plaza Live Dead Boys, March 23 at Will’s Pub

Big Freedia, March 31 at Will’s Pub Buddy Guy, April 6 at House of Blues OMD, April 12 at the Beacham Dr. Dog, April 13 at the Plaza Live

Yacht Rock Revue, March 23 at House of Blues

The Black Angels, April 16 at the Beacham

Alice Cooper, March 24 at Hard Rock Live

Jason Isbell, April 18 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Dashboard Confessional, March 25 at House of Blues

Bon Jovi, April 18 at Amway Center

Pink, April 24 at Amway Center

Peter Hook & the Light, June 3 at the Plaza Live

Ministry, April 26 at Hard Rock Live Clean Bandit, April 28 at the Beacham

Lucero, Frank Turner, June 10 at House of Blues

Alan Parsons Live Project, April 29 at the Plaza Live

Dua Lipa, June 13 at House of Blues

Yanni, April 30 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Maxi Priest, June 23 at House of Blues

The Brian Jonestown Massacre, May 3 at the Social

Erasure, July 8 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, May 8 at the Beacham

Glass Animals, July 26 at House of Blues Sam Smith, July 11 at Amway Center

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THURSDAY, MARCH 8

Bianca Del Rio T H E AT E R

If you can’t stand being the target of a walking rolodex of hate, maybe don’t come to see Bianca Del Rio. If you can, then haul your hog body to the “Blame It on Bianca” show this week at the Plaza Live. The drag queen alter ego of New Orleans comic Roy Haylock, this hateful bitch is best known for winning Season 6 of RuPaul’s Drag Race and infusing our daily lexicon with her one-line barbs – if you’ve ever said “Not today, Satan,” give her all your dollars. Watch out, Orlando – Hurricane Bianca is in town, and no one is safe. – Monivette Cordeiro

7 p.m. | The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave. | 407-228-1220 | plazaliveorlando.org | $39.50-$199

Daughtry 5 pm; SeaWorld, 7007 SeaWorld Drive; price of admission; 407-363-2613. Soft Kill, Choir Boy, Volcanist 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$14. SonReal, Davie 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$85; 407-246-1419. Triathalon, Inner Wave, Transcendental Telecom, DirtBike 8 pm; Blackstar, 42 W. Concord St.; $10; 407-872-0066. TWLOHA’s Heavy & Light 6 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $22; 407-934-2583. Universal Mardi Gras: Jason Derulo 8:30 pm; Universal Studios, 6000 Universal Blvd.; price of admission; 407-363-8000.

SUNDAY, MARCH 11 Central Florida Jazz Society Michael Kramer Fundraiser Concert 3 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15-$20; 407-636-9951. Elizabeth Baker: A Soft Roar Into the Void 7:30 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $10-$20 suggested donation; 407-595-2713. Frankie Negron noon-10 pm; Old Town, 5770 W. Irlo Bronson Highway, Kissimmee; free; 407-936-4332. Franky Rizardo, Dose, Ranger, Yokai 4 pm; Elixir, 9 W. Washington St.; free-$10. Hanson 5 pm; SeaWorld, 7007 SeaWorld Drive; price of admission; 407-363-2613. orlandoweekly.com

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Universal Mardi Gras: Fitz and the Tantrums 8:30 pm; Universal Studios, 6000 Universal Blvd.; price of admission; 407-363-8000. Vundabar, Rat Boys, Bothering Dennis 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$14.

MONDAY, MARCH 12 Daniel Saylor, Xyloglyph 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-270-9104. Jordan Foley 9 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

THEWEEK My Sinatra Saturday, 2 & 8 pm; Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $23-$85; 407-246-4262; drphillipscenter.org. National Theatre Live: Hamlet Benedict Cumberbatch stars as the Dane in this filmed version of a 2015 stage production. Thursday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $19.17; fathomevents.com.

Linqo, An American Astronaut, David McCorkle 9 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; $5 suggested donation; 407-423-3060.

Passages: The Journey of Our Ancestors Multicultural ensemble the Tamburitzans celebrate the world cultures brought to our country through immigration. Friday, 7:30 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org.

Vicki Genfan 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-636-9951.

Proof Friday-Sunday; Theater on the Edge, 5542 Hansel Ave.; $22-$26; 407334-1843; theaterontheedge.org.

The Wind and the Wave 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $12-$15; 407-246-1419.

Shakespeare in Love Friday, 7:30 pm; Orlando Shakespeare Theatre, 812 E. Rollins St.; $25-$50; orlandoshakes.org.

TUESDAY, MARCH 13 Jason Mraz 7:30 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; SOLD OUT; 844-513-2014. Resonant Rogues 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Tommy Stinson’s Cowboys in the Campfire 9 pm; Park Ave CDs, 2916 Corrine Drive; $15-$17; 407-447-7275.

THEATER Bianca Del Rio: Blame It on Bianca One-woman show from the acclaimed drag queen. Thursday, 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $39.50-$199; 407-228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com. The Devil Wears Prada: The Dragsical Alldrag musical adaptation of the film about a thinly veiled Anna Wintour. Saturday, 9 pm; Southern Nights, 375 S. Bumby Ave.; $20; 407-412-5039; southernnightsorl.com. The Great American Trailer Park Musical FridaySunday; Davenport Community Campus, 8 W. Palmetto St., Davenport; $24; theatreworksfl.org. The Lion King Wednesday-Sunday; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35.25$165; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org. Madagascar – A Musical Adventure Saturday-Sunday; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $15-$25; 407-896-7365; orlandorep.com.

Silent Sky Thursday-Sunday; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $30-$40; 407297-8788; madcowtheatre.com. Steel Magnolias Thursday-Sunday; Central Florida Community Arts, 250 SW Ivanhoe Blvd.; $15-$25; 407-937-1800 ext. 710; cfcarts.com. Twelfth Night Wednesday-Thursday, SaturdaySunday; Orlando Shakespeare Theatre, 812 E. Rollins St.; $25-$50; orlandoshakes.org.

COMEDY Alex U, Kirk Bonacci Friday-Saturday, 6:30 pm; Bonkerz – Otters on the River, 4380 Carraway Place, Sanford; $10; 407-6292665; bonkerzcomedyproductions.com. Ben Bailey Friday, 8 & 10:30 pm, Saturday, 7 & 9:45 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $20-$50; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Billy Ray Bauer, Eugene Torres FridaySaturday, 7:30 pm; Bonkerz – Boardwalk Bowl, 10749 E. Colonial Drive; $10; 407-6292665; bonkerzcomedyproductions.com. Central Florida Improv Fest Friday, 8 pm, Saturday, 7 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $10$25; 407-636-9951; adlibcomedy.com. E.L. Smith Wednesday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10-$40; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com.

407-755-0012

Jim Breuer Sunday, 5:30 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $25-$55; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. orlandoweekly.com

MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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THEWEEK Joselito Dapuppet Thursday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $25-$55; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Lip Sync for Lungs Local celebrities perform lip sync battles to raise money for the American Lung Association. Wednesday, 6:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $35-$50; 407-648-0001; lipsyncforlungsorlando.org. Shane Torres Friday, 9 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; $10; 407-896-7546.

DANCE Emerald City Cabaret: Foodies A food-inspired burlesque show. Friday, 9 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $15-$20; 407-412-6895; thevenueorlando.com. Step to the Irish Beat An Irish step dance performance by Watters School of Irish Dancing. Sunday, 4 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Super Happy Funtime Burlesque A stage show of sexy striptease and burlesque, bawdy comedy, circus stunts,

and live music. Thursday, 8 pm; Cafe DaVinci, 112 W. Georgia Ave., DeLand; free; 386873-2943; cafedavincideland.com.

ART

Sur Aur Taal Music and dance concert juried by the Asian Cultural Association’s board members. Sunday, 2 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25; drphillipscenter.org.

Celebrating the Genius of Women This annual art exhibition features local, national and international artists. Opens Friday, through April 27, 9 am-6 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.

The Van Ella Bordella A themed burlesque experience with performers from St. Louis and Chicago. Saturday, 8 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $18; 407412-6895; orlandoweeklytickets.com.

OPENINGS/EVENTS

Modern Art Madness Lecture Series This three-part series discusses the importance of modern art and looks at the various -isms and art movements that helped define it. Saturday, noon; SOBO Art Center, 127 S. Boyd St., Winter Garden; $15; 407-347-7996; wgart.org. Verdure Group show featuring plants as art. Opens Thursday, 7 pm, through April 9; The Hammered Lamb, 1235 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-704-3200. Wekiva Paint Out Interact with artists as they paint works of art inspired by Central Florida’s wildlife. Saturday through March 18, 8 am-7 pm; Wekiva Island, 1014 Miami Springs Road, Longwood; free; 407-463-3363; wekivapaintout.com. Women Artists in the Permanent Collection Tour Guided tour of works by female artists in the Alfond’s permanent collection. Wednesday, 5:30 pm; The Alfond Inn, 300 E. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-998-8090.

EVENTS Annual Plant Sale Saturday-Sunday, 9 am-5 pm; Harry P. Leu Gardens, 1920 N. Forest Ave.; free; 407-246-2620; leugardens.org. Central Florida Fair Through March 18; Central Florida Fairgrounds, 4603 W. Colonial Drive; $8-$95; 407-295-3247; centralfloridafair.com. Cirque Italia Italian cirque performance. March 8-11, 7:30 pm; Seminole Towne Center, 200 Towne Center Circle, Sanford; free$20; 941-704-8572; cirqueitalia.com. DeLand Indie Market: Spring Edition Curated market with vendors selling art, vintage clothing, handcrafted items and more. Sunday 11 am-5 pm; Artisan Alley, Artisan Alley, DeLand; free. Florida Strawberry Festival Through Sunday; Florida Strawberry Festival, 2209 W. Oak Ave., Plant City; $8-$10; 813752-9194; flstrawberryfestival.com. The Great Duck Derby Family day in the park with a rubber duck race, live music, face painting, a bounce house and more. Saturday, 10 am-2 pm; Mead Garden, 1300 S. Denning Drive, Winter Park; free; 407-623-3342. It’s Just Yoga Health & Fitness Festival Sunday, 10 am-5 pm; Lake Eola Park, Eola Drive, North 46

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● orlandoweekly.com


Eola Drive and East Robinson Street; donations; 407-619-0651; itsjustyogafest.com.

Bookstore, 124 E. Welbourne Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-335-4192; writersblockbookstore.com.

Nerd Nite Orlando Celebrate the fifth anniversary of Orlando’s Nerd Nite with new talks, games, prizes, and plenty of other surprises. Thursday, 6:3010 pm; Orlando Science Center, 777 E. Princeton St.; $10; 407-490-2531; orlando.nerdnite.com.

Meet the Author: Jeff Zentner Wednesday, 7 pm; South Creek Library, 1702 Deerfield Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.

Nightmare at Camp Blood A free familyfriendly horror celebration throughout the day with an adults-only afterparty at night. Saturday, 2 pm; Gods & Monsters, 5421 International Drive; free; godmonsters.com. Orlando Whiskey Festival Saturday, 7-10 pm; Mercedes-Benz of Orlando, 810 N. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $50-$245; 407645-4222; orlandowhiskeyfestival.com.

Monsters Can’t Lie Book Signing Official signing of volume one of the five-book series. Saturday, 5 pm; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free-$11; 407362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Orlando Poetry Slam With Faith Elizabeth Thursday, 8 pm; The Milk Bar, 2424 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-4954.

THEWEEK

Winter Park Library Book Festival All-day event with workshops, panels, speakers and more. Saturday, 9:30 am-4 pm; Winter Park Public Library, 460 E. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-623-3300; wppl.org.

American Athletic Conference Basketball Tournament College basketball tournament. Thursday, noon & 7 pm, Friday, noon & 7 pm, Saturday, 1 pm, Sunday, 3:30 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $30$65; 800-745-3000; amwaycenter.com.

SPORTS Alexander Rossi Meet and Greet A special event featuring Alexander Rossi, 2016 Indianapolis Champion, and Aaron Sigmond, author of Drive Time. Wednesday, 7:30 pm; TAG Heuer Boutique, 4200 Conroy Road; free; 407264-0445; tagheuer.com.

The Color Run Thousands of participants are doused from head to toe in different colors at each kilometer. Saturday 9 am; Osceola Heritage Park, 1875 Silver Spur Lane, Kissimmee; $27.99$47.99; 321-697-3333; thecolorrun.com. n

Refract Orlando A pop-up lounge with enigmatic decoration and ambiance. Friday, 8 pm; 210 N. Bumby Ave.; $20-$25; 407-3196298; facebook.com/refractorlando. Rockin’ Robinson Block party in the Milk District with live bands, food, drinks and more. Saturday, 4 pm; The Milk District, East Robinson Street and North Bumby Avenue; $10; rockinrobinson.com. Sunday in the Park Neighborhood festival with live entertainment, food vendors, a brownie competition and more. Sunday, noon-5 pm; Dartmouth Park, 822 Dartmouth St.; free; mycpna.org/sip.

LEARNING Julian Chambliss: Ages of Heroes, Eras of Men Rollins College professor of history Julian Chambliss discusses superheroes, comics, race and cities. Sunday, 2-4 pm; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-836-8500; thehistorycenter.org. This Lady Sings the Blues: A History of Women in Blues Music Join Dr. Naima Johnston-Bush for a musical lecture on the history of women and blues music. Saturday, 2:30 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.

CIVICS Good Morning Winter Park A public-input forum on the city’s proposed sign-code amendment. Friday, 8 am; Winter Park Welcome Center and Chamber of Commerce, 151 W. Lyman Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-644-8281; winterpark.org. Women of the Movement The Wells’ Built Museum honors four women who broke down racial barriers in Central Florida. Sunday, 3 pm; Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church, 4077 Prince Hall Blvd.; free; wellsbuilt.org.

LITERARY Erin Stalcup and Justin Bigos A reading of prose and poetry. Tuesday, 6 pm; Writer’s Block orlandoweekly.com

MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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“ZAPS”

B Y D A N S AVA G E

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Lola (A398121) is 3 years old and finds herself looking for a home because her owner can no longer care for her. Her previous owner stated that she is housebroken, very friendly, and does well with children. Lola loves attention and loves to play! If you’re looking for a loving and friendly pup, come meet Lola. For the month of March, OCAS adoption fees will be reduced to $5, $10 or $15 for the “Luck of the Paw” adoption promotion. Fees include sterilization, a microchip and vaccinations. Orange County Animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information about adopting a shelter pet, please call 407-8363111 or visit ocnetpets.com.

I’m an 18-year-old cis hetero girl from Australia and I’ve been listening to your podcast and reading your column since I was 13. Thanks to you, I’m pretty openminded about my sexuality and body. Having said that, I do have a few questions. I started watching porn from a youngish age with no real shame attached but I have some concerns. No. 1: I get off really quickly to lesbian porn but it never feels like a “good” orgasm. My guess is that subconsciously I think it’s inauthentic and therefore degrading. No. 2: I really enjoy and have the best orgasms to vintage gay male porn and trans FTM porn, which seems odd to me because I’m so far removed from the sexual acts that these kind of porn movies portray but I always feel satisfied after getting off to them. No. 3: I get off to tit-slapping videos but it screws with me morally. I understand why I like these kinds of videos. I have quite large breasts and I feel resentment toward them. It seems both morally wrong toward the progress I’ve made toward accepting my body and also to the message being sent about violence towards women. Care to weigh in? Concerned About Porn Preferences No. 1: There are gay men who watch straight porn, lesbians who watch gay porn, and 18-year-old hetero girls in Australia who watch lesbian porn and vintage gay porn and trans FTM porn. So many people get off watching porn that isn’t supposed to be for them – so many people fantasize about, watch and sometimes do things that aren’t supposed to be for them – that we have to view these “transgressions” as a feature of human sexuality, not a bug. No. 2: Lesbian porn gets you off, vintage gay porn and trans FTM gets you off, but you feel conflicted after watching lesbian porn because it seems inauthentic. That’s understandable – a lot of so-called lesbian porn is inauthentic, in that it’s made by and for straight men and features non-lesbian women going through the lesbian motions (often with long and triggering-for-actuallesbians fingernails). Some gay porn features gay-for-pay straight male actors, of course, but most gay porn features gay actors doing what they love; the same goes for most trans FTM porn, which is a small and mostly indie niche. I suspect your orgasms are just as good when you watch lesbian porn, CAPP, but the sense – suppressed when you were turned on, surfacing once you’re not – that the performers weren’t really enjoying themselves taints your lesbian-porn-enhanced orgasms in retrospect. The solution? Seek out lesbian porn featuring actual lesbians – authentic lesbian porn is out there. (I found a bunch with a quick Google search.) No. 3: Sometimes we overcome the negative messaging our culture sends us about

our identities or bodies only after our erotic imaginations have seized on the fears or self-loathing induced by those messages and turned them into kinks. Take small-penis humiliation (SPH). Before a guy can ask a partner to indulge him in SPH, CAPP, he has to accept (and kind of dig) his small cock. So the acceptance is there, but the kink – a turn-on rooted in a resolved conflict – remains. It can be freeing to regard a kink like SPH or your thing for tit-slapping as a reward – as the only good thing to come out of the shitty zap the culture puts on the head of a guy with a small cock or, in your case, a young woman with large breasts. So long as we seek out other consenting adults who respect us and our bodies, we can have our kinks – even those that took root in the manure of negative cultural messaging – and our self-acceptance and self-esteem, too. I have a deep-throating fetish. All the porn I watch is nothing but rough, sloppy blow jobs. I would love nothing more than to watch this kind of porn with my boyfriend, so we can add it the bedroom excitement, but I’m embarrassed to share this as a straight female. How do I go about sharing a fetish I have? Do I tell him over a candlelit dinner? Do I just turn some deep-throating porn on and see what happens? Help! Deep-throat Queen There’s never really a bad time to tell someone they won the lottery, DQ. Over a candlelit dinner, pop in some porn, send him a singing telegram – however you decide to tell him, DQ, the odds that he’ll react negatively are pretty low. Of course, watching someone deep-throat and doing it yourself are two different things, DQ. You won’t be able to go from disclosing your kink to realizing it during that candlelit dinner. Take it slow, maybe watch a few how-to videos in addition to the porn, find the positions and angles that work for you, etc., and work your way up to taking him all the way down. I’m a 32-year-old man. I recently met a hot older woman, age 46, who has told me she finds me equally hot. I’ve always preferred older women. I just love their confidence and their comfort in their own skin. They’re just so much sexier than my age cohorts. The problem is that I take a serious interest in feminism. I think I do pretty well with the overt stuff: I don’t mansplain, I call out peers who ignore sexism and I don’t objectify women, even when I do find them attractive. (Small steps, but steps nonetheless.) But when I see this woman and we flirt like mad, my brain just shuts off and all I can think about is her hot bod and the many hours I want to spend with it. However, I worry that she’s spent her whole life relying on her looks to gain validation from men, and that my brain-dead, loins-alive attraction orlandoweekly.com

is only perpetuating her objectification. Is that so? Or am I just overthinking things? Man, I Love Feminism At the risk of Dansplaining … There’s nothing feminist about slagging off younger women to justify your attraction to older women. You like what you like and you can own that without implying that younger women lack confidence and aren’t comfortable in their own skins. The same culture that put the zap on CAPP’s head for having large breasts – her breasts attracted unwanted attention and she resented her breasts and now gets off on erotic images of breasts being punished (even though she now knows her breasts weren’t the problem) – put the zap on your head too. Men, young and old, are supposed to be attracted to younger women. You’re not attracted to younger women, you’re attracted to older women; instead of accepting that, you feel compelled to justify it by comparing younger women to older women and declaring – again, by implication – that there’s something wrong with younger women. You sound like one of those gay men who can’t tell you why he’s attracted to dudes without also (or only) telling you what he dislikes about women. As for objectification, MILF, the problem with objectification is when the person doing the objectifying isn’t capable of simultaneously seeing the object of their affections as a three-dimensional human being with desires, fears and agency of their own. Technically, MILF, we are all objects – “a material thing that can be seen and touched” – but unlike, say, Fleshlights or vibrators, we feel joy and pain and have wants and needs. You can’t help being drawn to this woman’s externals; there’s a huge visual component to human attraction and, as your thing for older women demonstrates, there isn’t one universal standard of beauty. So long as you can objectify someone while at the same time appreciating their full humanity – so long as you can walk that walk and chew that gum – you don’t have to feel like a bad feminist for objectifying someone. (Particularly when that someone is clearly objectifying you!) On the Lovecast: Finally! Porn that makes consent SEXY. savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org

MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Marketplace ANTIQUE TELEPHONE COLLECTION FOR SALE – More than 200 antique telephones collected worldwide for 30+ years. European & American. From Wall Phones to Candlesticks, to Desk Sets & more. Some wanted by the Smithsonian. Selling telephone ephemera as well. Unbelievable & rare collection - first time open to public!! Collection located in South Florida. Serious buyers only. Call Jeff 954-295-6676 KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT Complete Treatment System. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com (AAN CAN) Denied Credit?? Work to Repair Your Credit Report With The Trusted Leader in Credit Repair. Call Lexington Law for a FREE credit report summary & credit repair consultation. 855-620-9426. John C. Heath, Attorney at Law, PLLC, dba Lexington Law Firm. (AAN CAN) Dish Network-Satellite Television Services. Now Over 190 channels for ONLY $49.99/ mo! HBO-FREE for one year, FREE Installation, FREE Streaming, FREE HD. Add Internet for $14.95 a month. 1-800- 3736508 (AAN CAN) Cash for cars and trucks Running or not Any Condition 352-771-6191. WANTED - All motorhomes, fifth wheels and travel trailers. Cars, vans and trucks any condition. Cash paid on the spot. Call 954-789-7530.

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50

Legal, Public Notices

AUCTION EXTRASPACE STORAGE – STORE 1335 1101 MARSHALL FARMS RD, OCOEE FL 34761 Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1101 Marshall Farms Rd, Ocoee FL 34761, 03/23/2018 @ 9:30am Francisco Gonzalez, Unit C209, Furniture and boxes, Tommy Brand, Unit 900B, Tools, Bins, Catherine Fitzgerald, Unit E331, House hold items, Nellie Hebert, Unit B178, Household, Kari hall, Unit C205, Household items, Alfonso Woods, Unit E334, car, running and registered cadillac dts. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Extra Space Storage 540 Cypress Parkway, Kissimmee Florida 34759- 3/20/18 @ 3:30PM. Allison Hazel Nicollshousehold items, Brain Santiago -twin bed, boxes, bags, Beatriz Cruz Marrero -household items, Eric Davis-household items, Takila Delvalle-household items. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1751 Fortune Rd Kissimmee FL 34744, 407-414-5303 on 3/20/18 @ 9:30 am. Courtney Crawford bins, Tisha Williams household goods washer & dryer, Tiesha Harrison boxes, table & TV’s, Zanym Patrichia Morales household goods, Isaiah Hassan furniture & boxes, Luz Tantalean boxes, totes, Edgar Camacho household goods, Carlos Magno Malavet business items, Kathleen Ann Dwyer household items, V Properties Inc boxes, business items. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 7-13, 2018

Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 11071 University Blvd. Orlando, FL 32817 on 03/28/2018 at 9:30 A.M: Eric Carl Stewart, papers, patio chair, racing rims; Natalie Robinson, one-bedroom apartment; Robert Francis, furniture, clothes, home goods; Andrealynn Benham, household goods; Andrealynn Boyd, electronics; Jorge Aponte, furniture; TarahDawn Chambers, furniture, home goods, clothing, art, and art supplies 11971 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando FL, 32825 on 3/28/2018 at 10:30am: Carrisa Lucky, Bicycle, Books, Boxes, Clothes, Shoes, Totes, Baby Crib, Stroller, Luggage, Head Board, Bed Frame, Water cooler; Jacqueline Centeno, Chair, Dresser, Table, Dryer, Washer, Bags, Books, Boxes, Pictures /photographs, Totes, Shelves, Luggage, Law n Mower, Bed Frame, Garden Tools; Jonathon Guzman, Dresser, Mattress, TV, Bags, Pictures/ photographs, Night stand, Air-cooled reflector; John Morris Conner, Couch, Table, DVD/ VCR, Boxes, Pictures/ photographs, Totes, Toys, Desk, Ladder, Eliptical machine, Vacuum, Garden Equipment, Bed Frame, Small trampoline, Holiday decorations, Wood cage; Tiffany Bolling, Chair, Mattress, Table, Boxes, Pictures/ Photographs, Totes, Wall Décor, Lamps, File Cabinet, Frames, Candle Holder, Rugs; Ada Carrasquillo, Bags, Boxes, Clothes, Totes, Carts, Movies, Lamp; Peter Moehrle, Chair, Table, Books, Boxes, Pictures/ Photographs, Movies, Antique File Cabinet, Canvas, Fishing Pole. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION IN RE: ESTATE OF RAFAEL DE LA TORRE, Deceased. File No. 2017-CP- 003577-O, Division: 01 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the Estate of RAFAEL DE LA TORRE, deceased, whose date of death was August 9, 2017, is pending in the Circuit Court for Orange County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE

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THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is 3/7/18. Attorney for Personal Representative: Lorenzo Cobiella, Esq., Florida Bar No.: 65881, 8105 NW 155 Street, Miami Lakes, Florida 33016, Telephone: (305) 818-9993. Personal Representative: Jeannine Bergmann, 8105 NW 155 Street, Miami Lakes, Florida 33016. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, PROBATE DIVISION File No. 59-2017- CP-0028540000-XX IN RE: ESTATE OF: AMERICA VICTORIA PAZMINO, a/k/a AMERICA V. PAZMINO, a/k/a

AMERICA PAZMINO, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS (summary administration) TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE: You are hereby notified that an Order of Summary Administration has been entered in the estate of AMERICA VICTORIA PAZMINO a/k/a AMERICA V. PAZMINO a/k/a AMERICA PAZMINO, deceased, File Number 59-2017- CP-0028540000-XX; by the Circuit Court for Seminole County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is P.O. Box 8099, Sanford, FL 32772; that the Decedent’s date of death was July 27, 2017; that the names of those to whom it has been assigned by such order are: Name, Address. Creditors: NONE KNOWN. Beneficiaries: NEY FRANKLIN ROMAN, 2680 Hazel Grove Lane, Oviedo, FL 32766. GERALD A. PAZMINO, 1627 Demott Ct., N. Merrick, NY 11566. MELVIN FITZGERALD PAZMINO, 2335 Grand Ave., Bellmore, NY 11710. SHIRLEY LISETTE PAZMINO, 1056 Covington St., Oviedo, FL 32765. ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT: All creditors of the estate of the decedent and persons having claims or demands against the estate of the decedent other than those for whom provision for full payment was made in the Order of Summary Administration must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SEC-

TION 733.702. ALL CLAIMS AND DEMANDS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER APPLICABLE TIME PERIOD, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this Notice is 3/7/18. Attorney for Person Giving Notice: /s/ Steven C. Allender, Attorney for Petitioner, Email: sallender@allenderlaw.com, Secondary Email: dorothy@allenderlaw.com, Florida Bar No. 0428302, ALLENDER & ALLENDER, 719 Garden Street, Titusville, Florida 32796, Telephone: (321) 269-1511, Fax # (321) 264-7676, 17-283- DC. Person Giving Notice: /s/ NEY FRANKLIN ROMAN, 2680 Hazel Grove Lane, Oviedo, FL 32766. /s/ GERALD A. PAZMINO, 1627 Demott Ct., N. Merrick, NY 11566. /s/ MELVIN FITZGERALD PAZMINO, 2335 Grand Ave., Bellmore, NY 11710. SHIRLEY LISETTE PAZMINO, 1056 Covington St., Oviedo, FL 32765. NOTICE OF SALE The following vehicle will be auctioned at A Reliable Towing, 2500 Forsyth Rd F7, Orlando FL 32807 on April 2, 2018 at 9:00 am: 2017 Jiangsu Bandino vin: L2BBBACG5HB000037


Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINETH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2017-CA- 011056O JAMES J. STEIN, Plaintiff, vs. BRIAN H. YOUNG, Defendant. NOTICE OF ACTION TO: BRIAN H. YOUNG, 4130 PELEE STREET, ORLANDO, FLORIDA 32817 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action for partition of real property located in Orange County, Florida: Lot 30, COLLEGE HEIGHTS, according to the plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book 8, Page 37, Public Records of Orange County, Florida. has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on R. Steven Ruta, Esquire, Barrett, Chapman & Ruta, P.A., 18 Wall Street, Orlando, Florida 32801, telephone number: 407839- 6227, telecopier: 407-6481190, on or before 30 days from the first date of publication and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on the plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. Dated FEB 07 2018. Tiffany Moore Russell, Clerk of the Circuit Court By: /s/ As Deputy Clerk, 425 North Orange Avenue, Suite 310, Orlando, Florida 32801. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO. 2017-CA- 001244 DIVISION FORECLOSURE OF MORTGAGE IN REM PRIH, LLC Plaintiff, vs. HORIZONS AT STONEBRIDGE PLACE UNIT 1207, LLC; STONEBRIDGE PLACE COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, INC.; HORIZONS AT STONEBRIDGE PLACE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC.; CONSOLIDATED ASSET MANAGEMENT I, LLC; JOHN DOE AND JANE DOE AS UNKNOWN TENANTS IN POSSESSION, IF ANY Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure entered on the 4th day of January 2018, and the Amended Order Nunc Pro Tunc on Plaintiff’s Emergency Motion to Reset Foreclosure Sale Date entered on the 19th day of February 2018, in the cause pending in the Circuit Court of the NINTH judicial Circuit, in and for Orange County, Florida, Civil Cause No. 2017-CA- 001244, wherein PRIH, LLC is the Plaintiff and HORIZONS AT STONEBRIDGE PLACE UNIT 1207, LLC; STONEBRIDGE PLACE COMMUNITY ASSO-

CIATION, INC.; HORIZONS AT STONEBRIDGE PLACE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC.; CONSOLIDATED ASSET MANAGEMENT I, LLC; JOHN DOE AND JANE DOE AS UNKNOWN TENANTS IN POSSESSION, IF ANY are the Defendants, the Clerk will sell at Public sale to the highest and best bidder for cash starting at the hour of 11:00 a.m. on the Wednesday, April 4, 2018, the property situated in said County, at 3190 Dante Drive, # 207, Orlando, FL 32835 (the “Property”), which is described as follows: Unit 207, Building Al, Phase 1, HORIZONS AT STONEBRIDGE PLACE, a Condominium according to the Declaration of Condominium thereof, as recorded in O.R. Book 6685, Page 1246, and any amendments thereto, Public Records of Orange County, Florida. Together with an undivided interest in and to the common elements appurtenant to said unit. The subject property shall be sold by electronic sale at: www.orange.realforeclose.com. IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK OF COURT NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60, DAYS ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS. Dated this 22nd day of February, 2018. FERRAIUOLI LLC, Attorneys for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 195168, San Juan, P.R. 00919-5168, Tel.: 787.766.7000, Fax: 787.766.7001, /s Sonia E. Colón, Sonia E. Colón, Fla. Bar# FBN: 0050475, Email: scolon@ ferraiuoli.com. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA SOUTHERN FOAM INSULATION, INC., a Florida corporation, Plaintiff, vs. AARON HAKIM and MAYADA SOUFAN; and ASPEN HOMES USA, INC., a Florida corporation, Defendants. CASE NO.: 2017-CA-008059-O NOTICE OF ACTION TO: AARON HAKIM, 1019 FLAGSTONE COURT, APOPKA, FLORIDA 32703 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action to enforce a construction lien on the real property located at 1019 Flagstone County, Apopka, Orange County, Florida 32703 and legally described as follows according to the Warranty Deed recorded in the public records of Orange County, Florida as Document No. 20140571810 at Official Records Book 10832, Page 4048: Lot 3, STONEWOOD RESERVE, according to the plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book 81, Page 05 and 06, Public Records of Orange County, Florida. (the “Property”) Parcel ID Number 23-21-28-8358-00-030 as well

as a claim for unjust enrichment has been filed against you. You are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Brett A. Marlowe, Esquire, Plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is Bennett Legal Group, P.A., 214 East Lucerne Circle, Suite 201, Orlando, Florida 32801, on or before March 22, 2018, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before you serve on Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Dated: February 9, 2018 TIFFANY MOORE RUSSELL, As Clerk of the Court, BY: /s/ Brian Williams, Deputy Clerk, 2018.02.09 09:00:42-05’00’, Deputy Clerk. Civil Division, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Room 310, Orlando, Florida 32801. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS FOR THE PROPOSED ADOPTION OF A MINOR CHILD. B.B.M., DOB: 01/07/2018, Case No.: 2018-DR-000349-O NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: LEON WILSON of Orlando, FL; African American male, DOB: 02/27/1970, Dark Brown Hair, Brown Eyes. Thin build, father of the minor child born in Orlando, FL on 01/07/2018. YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action has been filed against you and that you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses if any to ASHLEY FILIMON, P.A. whose address is 37 N. Orange Ave. Ste. 1150 Orlando, FL 32801, und file the original with the clerk of this Court at 425 N, Orange Ave. Orlando, FL 32801 before service on Petitioner or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you and the Court may enter an Order granting the Termination of Parental Rights for Adoption of the child. Copies of all court documents for this case, including orders, are available at the Clerk of the Circuit Courts office. You may review these. documents upon request. You must keep the Courts informed of your current address, You must file a response with the Clerk by 03/01/2018. Dated 2/1/18. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, BY: /s/ Kierah Johnson, DEPUTY CLERK. CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE: I HEREBY CERTIFY that this has been filed in the Florida E-Portal this 11th day of January, 2018. /s/ Ashley Filimon, Esq., Ashley Filimon, P.A., afilimon@legalperson. com, 37 N. Orange Ave. Suite 202 Orlando, Florida 32801, 407-8015022- Telephone, Florida Bar No. 0095954, Attorney for Petitioner.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO. 2017-CA-9418, ASHINGTON PARK HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, vs. AYMAN H. AS-SAIDI and FADIA N. AS-SAIDI A/K/A FADIA N. ABDALLAH, Defendants. NOTICE OF ACTION TO: AYMAN H. AS-SAIDI and FADIA N. AS-SAIDI A/K/A FADIA N. ABDALLAH, 4339 Pembridge Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32826. Current residence unknown, if living, and ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PARTIES, including if a named Defendant is deceased, the personal representatives, the surviving spouse, heirs, devisees, grantees, creditors, and all other parties claiming, by, through, under or against that Defendant, and all claimants persons or parties, natural or corporate, whose exact legal status is unknown, claiming under any of the above named or described Defendants. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a lien on the following property located in Orange County, Florida: LOT 12, STONEMEADE, PHASE 1, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 33, PAGES 113 AND 114, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. Street address of: 4339 Pembridge Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32826, has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to Peter Hagood, Esquire, Hagood Law Group., Plaintiff’s attorney, at 451 Maitland Avenue, Altamonte Springs, Florida 32701, within 30 days of the first date of publication of this notice, and file the original with clerk of this court (425 North Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801) either before March 23, 2018 on Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. Tiffany Moore Russell, Orange County Clerk of Court By: /s/ Brian Williams, Deputy Clerk, Civil Division, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Room 310, Orlando Florida, 32801. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP16-666 IN THE INTEREST OF: A.I. Female DOB: 07/16/2003, A.I. Male DOB: 09/14/2006, P.I. Female DOB: 01/10/2009, C.I. Male DOB: 08/24/2012, minor children SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Chaintia Dority, Address unknown WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under

oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren). You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 15th day of March, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 13th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.:56020 State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380. Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP16-666 IN THE INTEREST OF: A.I. Female DOB: 07/16/2003, A.I. Male DOB: 09/14/2006, P.I. Female DOB: 01/10/2009, C.I. Male DOB: 08/24/2012, minor children SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Antonio Isom, Sr.,, Address unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren). You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 15th day of March, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL

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RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 13th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.:56020 State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380. Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP17-03 IN THE INTEREST OF: P.S., a male child, DOB: 05/12/2014, minor child SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Skye Sweetser, Address unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren). You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 11th day of April, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 21st day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.:56020 State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380. Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal).

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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03/Shea/Westgate CASE NO.: DP17-157 In the Interest of: R. B., a female child, DOB: 03/09/2017 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Tiara Banda, Address Unknown, WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren), a copy of which is attached. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea, on 14th day of March, 2018 at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 9th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Layali Salem, Esq., Florida Bar #0111746, Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, 882 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, Florida 32811, (407) 563-2380, Layali.salem@myflfamilies.com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 07/Dawson/Westgate CASE NO.: DP15-328 IN THE INTEREST OF: I.C. DOB: 11/23/2010, S.C. DOB: 06/09/2012, A.C. DOB: 08/26/2014 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: William Christiana, Address unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren). You are hereby com-

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manded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 12th day of March, 2018, at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 7th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kirsten Teany, Esq.. Florida Bar No.: 981540, State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380. Kirsten.teany@ myflfamilies.com. By: (Signed) Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/Shea CASE NO.: 16-DP- 698 IN THE INTEREST OF: C.M. DOB: 08/31/2015, minor child SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: JAMES MARTIN, Address Unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached; you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea, at 9:30 a.m., on the 9th day of April, 2018, at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (THESE CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 7-13, 2018

availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 6th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kelley Galvin, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643 -Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/Shea CASE NO.: 16-DP- 698 IN THE INTEREST OF: C.M. DOB: 08/31/2015, minor child SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: STEPHANIE MCDONALD, Address Unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached; you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea, at 9:30 a.m., on the 9th day of April, 2018, at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (THESE CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 6th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kelley Galvin, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643 -Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY,

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FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/Shea CASE NO.: 16-DP- 676 IN THE INTEREST OF: W. H., DOB: 10/10/2016, minor child. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: KIMBERLY SASSER, Address Unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached; you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea, at 9:30 a.m., on the 29th day of March, 2018, at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (THESE CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 8th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kelley Galvin, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643 -Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/Shea CASE NO.: 16-DP- 676 IN THE INTEREST OF: W. H., DOB: 10/10/2016, minor child. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: MICHAEL HIGHT, Address Unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached; you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea, at 9:30 a.m., on the 29th day of March, 2018, at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING.

You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (THESE CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 8th day of February, 2018. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kelley Galvin, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643 -Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). LIVE AUCTION MULTIPLE FACILITIES – MULTIPLE UNITS Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Facility 1: 610 Rinehart Rd, Lake Mary, FL 32746: March 19, 2018 11:30am: Michael Yetman, household furniture, boxes of books, plates, office furniture; Marion Stapf household goods; Jane Parks, household goods; Ippolito Coscarella, a red van 1994 Mercury Villager Vin# 4M2DV11W3RDJ11704; Julio Rojas, household goods; Richard Marcy, construction tools; Lavoera Cooper, household goods; Randy Brown, boxes, king size bed, sectional, love seat; Vash Ramnarain, household goods; A.S.K Facility Management Services, Janitorial Equipment and furniture; Daddy’s Home Inc., business goods; Anthony Nieves, personal items 2013 Yamaha bike YZF-R6 Vin# JYARJ16EXDA028896 name on title Elizabeth Rosario lien holder Capital one; Crystal Kugler, household goods; Glenn Pickard, furniture, boxes, household items; Glenn Pickard, furniture, boxes, household items; Mary Alvarez De La Campa, mattress and nic nack valuables Facility 2: 2728 W 25 th St, Sanford, FL 32771: March 19, 2018 12:30pm: Carolyn Ashley, Household Items; Charles Odom, Household Items; Charlisa Carter, Household Goods; Roderick King, Household Goods; Shakita Cook, Household Goods; Darrin Bundy, Tools and Boxes Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in

order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE CASE NO. 17-DM- 0620 In the Chancery Court for Washington County at Jonesborough Tennessee LINDSEY VICTORIA ROMPA vs. JAY JEFFREY LEE In this cause, it appearing from the Complaint, which is sworn to, that the Defendant, JAY JEFFREY LEE is a non-resident of the State of Tennessee, it is ordered by me that publication be made for four successive weeks, as required by law, in the Orlando Weekly, a newspaper published in Orlando Florida in Orange County, notifying said non-resident Defendant to file an answer with Plaintiff’s Attorney at the following address, MATTHEW BETTIS, 100 Med Tech Parkway, Ste. 110 within 30 days from the last date of publication, exclusive of said last date of publication, or a judgment by default may be entered and the cause set for hearing ex parte as to him. Dated: 2/28/2018. /s/Sarah Lawson, Clerk and Master, /s/Lora Eldridge, Deputy Clerk and Master. Notice is given to all past medical providers of Antonio Rivera Alvira. Contact Ernesto Gonzalez, Esq. within two weeks of the date of publication of this Notice. 407-898-7303, ernestogonzalez16@yahoo. com. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Fabio DeJesus Vasquez, of 2004 South Prince Ct, Winter Park, FL 32792 in the county of Seminole, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: Talking Walls It is the intent of the undersigned to register “Talking Walls” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 2/28/18 NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, L5 Media, LLC, of 4925 Briar Oaks Circle, Orlando, FL 32808, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: L5 Entertainment It is the intent of the undersigned to register “L5 Entertainment” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 2/28/18


Legal, Public Notices

NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Luis Manuel Erazo, of 3624 La Salle Ave, Saint Cloud, FL 34772 in the county of Osceola, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: DkP It is the intent of the undersigned to register “DkP” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 3/1/18 NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Michael Colon, Edward Hernandez, of 430 Michigan Ave, Saint Cloud, FL 34769 in the county of Osceola, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: Electrodocz It is the intent of the undersigned to register “Electrodocz” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 2/27/18 NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8 am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Kirkman-600 S Kirkman Rd-Orlando 4/4/18 6050 Gregory Garner 5027 Larnie White 6051 Allison Jackson 1036 Laurie Walwyn 3043 Nichola Boyd 6015 Keith Jenkins 3103 Sharon Jordan 1020 Sherline Ulysse 2102 Lakesha Wright 3061 Fredrick Johnson 3037 Shabiki Dann 6011 Ruth Brown 1009 Joyce Trimble 2130 Quan Miller 1086 Arnold Cowrd 6053 John Chameli 2103 Karen Dunbar 3011 Gina Van Epps 3069 Shania Shaw 3003 Frederick Dauley 1055 Romean Hamzehloui 1031 Laurie Walwyn 1015 Karen Smith 2111 Carla Holmes Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave-3500 S Orange Ave- Orlando 4/4/18 AA6200G Richard Fragel 2127 Craig Felder 1110Ivette Lopez 1062 Brian Margolis AA0252G Richard Fragel AA7551F Richard Fragel 2135 Kristen Steavens AA2202B Richard Fragel AA5853B Richard Fragel 1415 Kyung Il Kim 1153 Ayla Harris Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001

E Colonial Drive -Orlando 4/4/18C149 Frank Anderson B209 Anthony Gallippi AA1634E Aaron Hochman F104 Govanni Estremera B160 Ann Gallagher AA6069G Aaron Hochman D167 Jerry Blankenship C177 Ann Gallagher D169 Pamela Saffran D138 Adam Ardekani AA8468F Aaron Hochman D125 Elyssa Baity D106 Anna McKinnes Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod-508 N Goldenrod Rd - Orlando 4/4/18 429 Leanna Rosario 221 Adrain Robinson 241 Vanessa Baez 518 Fritchie Bayan 714 Helen Bissoon Uhaul Ctr Alafaya-11815 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 4/4/18 1116 Blake Cagle 1504 Daniyel Rodriguez 1429 Carlos Longmire 1015 Amanda Salmanca 1222 Glenn Winkleman 1114 Jose Vega. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates at 10:00 a.m. at 10850 COSMONAUT BLVD ORLANDO, FL 32824, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. March 23, 2018 1NXBR12E7YZ318162 2000 TOYOTA 4T1BG22K6WU840392 1998 TOYOTA March 25, 2018 1NXBR18E4WZ030295 1998 TOYOTA 2G4WS52J1Y1246493 2000 BUICK SALNM222X3A280649 2003 LAND ROVER. Notice Of Public Sale Personal property of the following tenants will be sold for cash to satisfy rental liens in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self Storage Facility Act, Sections 83-806 and 83-807. Contents may include kitchen, household items, bedding, toys, games, boxes, barrels, packed cartons, furniture, trucks, cars, etc. There is no title for vehicles sold at lien sale. Owners reserve the right to bid on units. Lien sale to be held online ending Wednesday, March 21, 2018 at times indicated below. Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetreasures. com beginning 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time! Also visit www.personalministorage. com/Orlando-FL- storage-units/ for more info. Personal Mini Storage Edgewater-6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 0025 Angel Alfredo Vega, AVR Woodworks LLC, 0108 Ana Larrieux, 0209 Isaiah Demarcus Brown, 0324 Haroldo Alfonso Plata Miro, No Limit Carpet Care, 0506 Martin Anibal Vasquez Moreta, 0528 Andy Anioce, 0709 Gerodney Antionio Barnes, All For One, 0711 Kim-

berly Ann Hudson, 0748 Marianne Wittels, 0910 Brenda Wu, 1017 Jeremy Curtis Rydenbark, 1110 Ranessa C Lane, 1214 Valerie Rose Van Horn, 1229 Charlotte Ann Bruce, 1230 Charlotte Ann Bruce, 1326 Renee Smith Macon, 1327 Connie Askam Lettieri, 1332 Coleta Lorraine Williams, 1715 Jeffery Michael Allen, 2102 Nimely James Harris, Sun Trust Bank, VIN: 2C3LA63H86H417924, 2006 Chrysler 300 Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd-6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810-at 12:00 pm: 1059 Tamara Nichole Joiner, 1088 Heather Lynn Horne, 1095 D Adreinne Chardonnet Postell, 2038 Desmond Lennox Soanes, 2076 Melinda S Arroyo, 3035 Craig Joseph Bradshaw, 3167 Shaun Williams, 3223 Nichalos Sanchaz Lane, 3280 Donald Matthew Thompson, 4047 Victoria Lynn Morris, 4055 Danic Jackson, 4058 Joshua Edward Smith, 4123 Jacqueline Mincey, 5034 Rayshard Elijah Brinson, 5053 Trevaughn Javaruss Williams, 5066 Cameron Campbell, 6017 Brittany Lynn Rendon. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the locations indicated: on March 28th, 2018 at 1:30 PM at 5753 Hoffner Ave, Orlando, FL, 32822 (407) 212-5890, Sandra Ivelisse Rivers rios- Household goods, Angel Bruno-Household goods, Ashley Taber -Household goods, Rosalba Cruisostomo- Household goods, Maria Calderon - Household goods, Jahroy Sackey- Household goods, Julia Charlene Cleveland- Household goods, Michelle Knight- Household goods, Adrian Robinson- Household goods, Mariano Solis- Household goods, Jeannie Verite- Household goods, Alvin James- household goods, Jose Ramirez- Household goods, Sergio Armando Luna- House hold goods, Geronimo Ventura- Household goods. 3:00 PM location: 11261 Narcoossee Orlando FL, 32822 Raymond HumpheryBedroom Bed 4:30 PM location: 13125 S. John Young Parkway Orlando, FL. 32837 (407)5167005 Linda Kranert-Household goods, Arturo Vargas-Household items, Bobby Brooks Jr- Household items, Kaitlin Bell-Home items, Tyana Harland-Household items, Esmeralda Frias-Household items. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facilities in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that Mindful Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following times and locations: March 20th, 2018 at 2:00 p.m. at the Mindful Storage facility located at: 900 Cypress Pkwy. Kissimmee, Fl. 34759 (321) 732-6032 The personal goods stored therein by the following: #J203- Furniture, #H213-House Holds, #G201-House Holds, #D220-House Holds, #C104House Holds, #2151-House Holds, #2127-Furniture, #2104- Boxes, #2089-House Holds, #2055-House Holds, #2042-House Hold, #1122-House Hold, #1109- Food & Water. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Mindful Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 29th, 2018 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5603 Metrowest Blvd. Orlando, FL 32811 (407) 445-0867 #02085-Mauricio Brandini- household items #02100-Yvonne Whitepersonal, household items #08004 Tammi Griffin- personal property #02211 Martha Hussey-boxes, bags #05036 Joseph Williamsbeds, furniture, boxes #02035 Renee Williams-household furniture, items, etc #04030 Dave Ogeris- bedrooms, living, dining rooms furniture, boxes, misc items #07027 Diana Morris-table, chairs, mattresses, boxes, misc items. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5592 L. B. McLeod Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32811 (407) 445-2709 #451 Robert Lauenstein -Household goods #145 Ten 55 Productions – Household goods, #249 Hillary West- 2 bedroom apt, #538 Leonardo Ajala Household goods, #438 Arturo Silva household goods. 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located 4601 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL. 32839 (407) 630-9395: 0J019Mona Guillaume Bags,Chair,Toys0C058 Bruce Eric Shawen, personal items-0C038 Marie Louis J Petit Fond, Household goods0I045 Louis Agenor Lourdes, boxes- 0H056 Krystal Wilson, furniture and personal items0C013 Aryantee FORT, furniture

and personal items- 0A011 Desner Abraham, furniture and personal items. 1:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL. 32839 (407)839-5518: #1003 Tina Yvette Williams mattress, household items, #1029 Angel Santo Linares Olea household items, #1031 Roslyn Scott household items, beds, #2069 Cheletta Harty clothes,box,#3019 LaVisha Culbreth household goods, #3032 Eric Harris household items, #3078 Kimberly Roman bags, clothing, #3107 Daphney JeanFrancois furniture, boxes,#4040 Jeremy Timot household items. 3:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1420 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804 (407) 3128736 #577 Kelly Greene Furniture and files, #463 Michael Parker Household Goods. 4:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 489-3742 #3036 Depusoir TraceyHousehold Goods, #3084 Edward Gromling-Household Goods, #3034 Eugene D. Nathan-boxes totes, #2097 Bobbie Jacksonboxes bicycle, #1077 Linda DurreDesk Boxes household goods, #1030 Carlos Maruri-boxes and personal goods, #1122 Melissa Lounge Moren-boxes and small furniture and a rug, #3000 Tangela Harrell-table tvs totes boxes personal items, #2091 Gregory Bell- Household Goods, #4120 Joshua Evans- Household Goods. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 30th, 2018 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 408-7437 #1304-Phyllis Reed- Boxes, furniture #1307-Rubi DavidsonFurniture, boxes #1513-Robert Frank-Household items #1709Greg Cozart- Household items. 10:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 831 N Park Ave. Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450- 0345 #2021 Amanda Khoury Couch, TV, Bags, Boxes, Clothes, Picture Frame, Vacuum Cleaner #1100- D Roy Saldana Mirror, Boxes, Bookshelf, Stroller. Purchases must be made with

orlandoweekly.com

cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd, Kissimmee, FL 34746 (407) 944-1408 on 3/20/18 @ 12:30 pm: Dorna Noble Furniture, Simone Braham Clothing, jewelry, flat screen, fitness equipment, Naomi Stella Cavanaugh household goods, Mikia Graham household goods, Wenona Torres household goods, Kris Guardiola household goods, Robert Hernandez rugs, Michelle Lopez household goods, Giovanni Rosario household goods, Nefthalie Ortiz Colon matress, boxes, sofa, Alan Bacchiocchi, furniture, plastic bins. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF SALE The following vehicles will be sold at Public Auction for cash to satisfy lien pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on March 27th, 2018 at 9:00 am at Dynamic Towing, 6408 Old Cheney Hwy., Orlando, FL. (407) 273-5880 1993 NISS JN8HD17S4PW129407 2005 TOYT JTDKB20U257040709 NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 4A4MM21S34E144760 2004 MITS JA4MT31P8VP015988 1997 MITS To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on March 18, 2018, 606 Haralson Ave, Orlando, FL 32805 All Auto Towing, INC. NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 1J4GX48S62C226689 2002 JEP To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on March 20, 2018, 606 Haralson Ave, Orlando, FL 32805 All Auto Towing, INC.

MARCH 7-13, 2018 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

53


Legal, Public Notices

Notice of Public Sale: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on March 23, 2018 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Services, LLC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids; WDBCA35D7JA384439 1988/Merz 5NPEC4AC7DH731093 2013/Hyun JN1CA21DXTT167883 1996/Niss 2G4WB55K3Y1229568 2000/Buic 1YVGF22C3W5720446 1998/Mazd WAUBJ84A9PN077788 1993/Audi 1HTMMAAL69H068549 2009/Intl 1UYVS2534J2369238 1988/Utility JT3VN29V8P0015670 1993/Toyot JS3TX92V914111972 2001/Suzi 2FMZA5145XBB44862 1999/Ford 3VWSA29M0YM185499 2000/Volk 1FACP52U7NA146490 1992/Ford 1HGCG2259YA030909 2000/Hond 1J4GK48K96W144975 2006/Jeep 2HGEJ6619YH524925 2000/Hond 5TDBT44A34S217930 2004/Toyot 1GNDT13W3VK162254 1997/Chev 4T1SK12EXNU145236 1992/Toyt WBAVB13596K001168 2006/BMW 1GKDT13S422313608 2002/GMC JTKDE177X60126413 2006/Scion 1XKYDP9X2EJ406366 2014/KW 1KKVE532811204523 2001/KEN 1UYVS2532GM381417 2016/Utility 3FA6P0H72GR140560 2016/Ford 5TDKKRFH7GS162607 2016/Toyt 1N4AL3AP2HC271697 2017/Niss 2C3CCABG7GH219990 2016/Chry. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: ABA FOREIGN USED AUTO PARTS & AUTO SALES gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 03/19/2018, 09:00 am at 366 N COUNTY ROAD 13 ORLANDO, FL 32833-3325, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ABA FOREIGN USED

54

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 7-13, 2018

orlandoweekly.com

AUTO PARTS & AUTO SALES reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. 1LNHM86S92Y637385 2002 LINCOLN NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under The Florida Self Storage Facility Act Statutes (Section 83.801-83.809). The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on, Thursday, March 22nd, 2018 at 10:00 AM, on lockerfox.com said property has been stored and which are located at: iStorage, 3400 Forsyth Rd, Winter Park FL 32792 Name, Unit #, Contents: Kapiszka, Kevin - 492 - furniture, Shelving, boxes, totes, bags, Bar stools, Bicycle, Printer, Electronics, speakers, Tools, Lamps, chest, HHG Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase by cash only. All purchased items are sold as is, where is, and must be removed at the time of the sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Dated this 7th day of March and 14th day of March, 2018. NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2005 Nissan VIN# 1N4BA41E75C869939 2001 Chevy VIN# 1Y1SK528X1Z415287 2004 Nissan VIN# 1N6AA06A74N501555 2016 Toyota VIN# JTKJF5C76GJ024678 2015 RIYA VIN# LEHTCB019FR512295 1999 Jeep VIN# 1J4FF67S1XL576346 2004 Ford VIN# 1FAFP34394W186609 1995 Ford VIN# 1FTCR14XXSTA40863 1993 Chevy VIN# 2G1FP22S5P2138232 2012 Nissan VIN# 3N1AB6AP1CL693457 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on March 21, 2018 at 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale. 2001 NISSAN VIN# 1N4DL01D01C103757 1995 ACURA VIN# JH4DB7657SS009565 2000 MERCURY VIN# 1MEFM59S7YA630361 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on March 26th, 2018, at 2500 N.

Forsyth rd, Orlando Fl 32807. Around The Clock Towing inc. Notice of Sale Name – Property – Unit # Norma Salazar – Wood, paintings, mattress, couch, misc household and personal items - 304, Oasis Gaffney – Mattress, boxes, mirror, misc household and personal items – 418h, Nelson Pina - Car parts, tools, misc household, personal, and shop items, cords. – 258, Carlos Salazar – Trash cans, buckets, paintings, mannequin, boxes, misc household and personal items – 150, Juan Carlos Salazar – Bikes, tiles, tire, snow shovel, misc tools and personal items – 065, Keno Perez – ladders, buckets, cabinet, weights, carpet, misc tools and household items – 045, Keno Perez – Tires, panel doors, bikes, shelf, buckets, toolbox, tools, misc household items - 046. Ample Storage, 6493 E Colonial Dr, Orlando FL 32807, has possessory lien on all goods stored in the prospective units above. All these items of personal property are being sold pursuant to the asserting of the lien on 3/15/2018 at 11:00AM in order to collect the amount due from you. The sale will take place at 6493 E Colonial Dr, Orlando FL 32807.

Employment

ENGINEERING ServiceNow Inc, enterprise IT platform provider, has openings in Orlando, FL for Senior Technical Support Engineer (7251) Apply understanding of ServiceNow software and web platform to troubleshoot difficult technical issues. Mail resume & reference job code to: ServiceNow Inc. Attn Global Mobility 2225 Lawson Ln Santa Clara, CA 95054 IT Project Manager, F/T Sanford, FL. Use tech skills such as SQL, My SQL, Oracle 12c Database, Omnymbus, Cisco Packet Tracer etc. Dvlp full-scale prjct plans & assoc. communication docs. Plan & schedule project timelines using appropriate tools & coordinate w. the Engineering Dpt to ensure optimum condition of equipment & connections etc.Edu: Bach. (or foreign equiv.) in Information Systems Mngmnt, Engineering (any), IT or a related. Apply: Mr. Patel, RAFT Integration LLC, 5612 Deer Path Lane, Sanford, FL 32771.


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